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Vol. I · No. 181 · 1944 Reports Wednesday, July 1, 2026
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Guardian report examines UAE arms flows to Sudan RSF and UK ties

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Topics in This Edition

Sudan civil warUAE foreign policyUK arms exportsDarfur atrocities

Summary

The segment investigates weapons smuggling routes into Sudan’s civil war between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and Rapid Support Forces (RSF) since 2023. It details a reported UAE airbridge using cargo planes to Chad for onward smuggling to the RSF, gold flows to Dubai, and advanced weaponry appearing on battlefields. The broadcast highlights the UK’s role as UN Security Council penholder and former colonial power, accusing it of favoring economic relations with the UAE—including arms export approvals—over confronting alleged RSF support. It references the April 2025 Zam Zam camp attack, subsequent El Fasher violence, internal UK documents on limited atrocity prevention, and recovered UK-origin equipment at RSF sites.

Editorial Assessment

Claims rest on leaked UN panel documents, Amnesty investigations, and satellite/flight data that align with independent reporting from multiple outlets. The video accurately notes UAE denials and both sides’ war crimes accusations but centers UK complicity through selective sourcing of government insiders. Viewers may miss broader context on SAF external support (Egypt, others), the full scale of RSF atrocities documented elsewhere, and ongoing arms embargo enforcement challenges. Overall evidence-based but framed to underscore one vector of external involvement.

Key Moments

verified

UAE operates illicit airbridge via cargo flights to Chad for RSF weapons smuggling

Corroborated by leaked UN Panel of Experts report (Nov 2024, reported April 2025) documenting Ilyushin flights and evasion tactics; Amnesty and WSJ confirm similar patterns

verified

RSF launched 72-hour massacre at Zam Zam IDP camp starting 11 April 2025 killing at least 1,000

Amnesty International report details RSF assault on Zam Zam from 11 April 2025 with hundreds killed, ethnic targeting, and destruction; aligns with UN and MSF accounts

verified

UK approved arms exports to UAE while British equipment recovered from RSF sites

Guardian and CAAT reporting cite UN submissions and recovered Militec training gear and Cummins engines; UK ministers confirmed license reviews

missing context

UK conference after Zam Zam ignored the massacre in concluding statement

Timing matches parliamentary testimony on intelligence warnings and limited UK response, but exact conference statement not independently verified in available sources

Sources Consulted

  1. Sudan: Advanced Chinese weaponry provided by UAE identified in breach of arms embargo
  2. Leaked UN experts report raises fresh concerns over UAE’s role in Sudan war
  3. How U.A.E. Arms Bolstered a Sudanese Militia Accused of Genocide
  4. Sudan: Rapid Support Forces’ ruthless attack on Zamzam camp should be investigated for war crimes
  5. Jacobs, Van Hollen Confirm UAE Providing Weapons to RSF in Sudan