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I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 56 of the Subcommittee on International Human Rights of the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Development.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format. All witnesses have completed the required connection tests in advance of the meeting.
I'd like to go over a few rules for participants.
First, please wait until I recognize you by name before speaking. All comments should be addressed through the chair.
For members in the room and on Zoom, if you wish to speak, please raise your hand. The committee clerk and I will manage the speaking order as best we can.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on June 4, 2024, the subcommittee is resuming its study of the current situation in Sudan.
I would like to welcome our witnesses. We have France‑Isabelle Langlois, executive director of Amnistie internationale Canada francophone, and Yonah Diamond, senior legal counsel with the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights.
You'll be given a maximum of five minutes for your remarks, after which we'll proceed with a round of questions and answers.
Ms. Langlois, I invite you to make your opening statement.
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for your invitation.
Amnesty International notes that, since April 15, 2023, tens of thousands of people have been killed or injured in deliberate and indiscriminate attacks in Sudan in battles between the Rapid Support Forces, the RSF, and the Sudanese Armed Forces, the SAF, which are fighting in the capital, Khartoum, and elsewhere in the country, including in the Darfur and Kordofan regions. The fighting followed months of tension between the two groups over the potential reform of security forces that was proposed as part of negotiations for a new transitional government, among other issues.
The FAS is led by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, while the RSF is led by General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, also known as Hemedti.
Given the scale of the fighting and the organization of both sides, the situation can be considered a non-international armed conflict under the Geneva Conventions. As a result, it is governed by international humanitarian law, which seeks to protect civilians and other non-combatants in armed conflicts. Amnesty International considers both the SAF and the RSF to be state forces. Various non-state armed and militia groups are also involved.
Dozens of women and girls have been raped by combatants on both sides. The conflict, which has been going on for more than a year, continues to spread across the country, and the city of El Fasher, in North Darfur, the only capital of the five Darfur states that is not controlled by the RSF, has been surrounded by them and their allies. The city has a population of over 1.5 million, including hundreds of thousands of displaced people who are now trapped and in danger of being subjected to large-scale violations. Hundreds of thousands of people could be killed.
Amnesty International has received reports of villages being set on fire, increased air strikes, bombing of residential areas, including the IDP camp at Abu Shouk, and aid delivery being blocked by both sides.
Following an investigation, Amnesty International was able to establish that all parties to the conflict are committing serious violations of international human rights and humanitarian law. Some of the violence committed by the parties to the conflict amounts to war crimes and even crimes against humanity.
Thousands of men, women and children are caught in the crossfire. Combatants on both sides, who often use inappropriate weapons and explosive ammunition with wide area effects, often launch attacks from densely populated residential areas. Looting of public and private property, including medical and humanitarian infrastructure, is exacerbating the already dire humanitarian situation. More than 70% of hospitals, if not 80%, are now non-functional.
More than 11 million people have been internally displaced, and an estimated 2.1 million have fled to neighbouring states, where they live in appalling conditions. More than 16,650 people have been killed since the conflict escalated. Millions of people are at immediate risk of starvation. The humanitarian crisis has been exacerbated by severe shortages of food, water, medicine and fuel. According to information made public in June 2024, more than 750,000 people are facing catastrophic levels of food insecurity, and 25.6 million are acutely food insecure.
Despite multiple ceasefire declarations, fighting has intensified. In July, Amnesty International released a report detailing a steady influx of weapons into the country, fuelling the conflict and the unprecedented humanitarian crisis. The arms embargo in Sudan is therefore totally ineffective.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Before I begin, I just want to say that I am replacing my colleague Mutasim Ali, a world-leading authority on the conflict and on accountability for Sudan, because a close friend of his was killed yesterday in El Fasher in north Darfur. This is the reality for all members of the community. I want to dedicate this testimony to Mubarak Musa Abu Sin, in his memory.
We are discussing an atrocity situation that is affecting the same groups and survivors of genocide from 20 years ago. There is no need, really, to mention at this point the extent of the humanitarian catastrophe. It's already well known. It's just that the world is largely turning away from the largest humanitarian catastrophe on earth. More than 10 million are displaced, and 26.6 million are facing acute hunger. That is more than half the population.
It's threatening to result in 2.5 million deaths by the end of this year alone from famine. By next year, we may witness the largest amount of deaths from starvation that we've ever seen in our lifetime. Some are even estimating that it will be up to 12 million or 13 million by next year under these current conditions. We have no time to waste. As the conflict continues, more will continue to be killed every day, as I mentioned from the daily experience of the Sudanese community.
In April of this year, at the Raoul Wallenberg Centre, my colleague Mutasim and I led an inquiry into breaches of the genocide convention in Darfur. Based on our conclusions, we found that the Rapid Support Forces have committed genocide against the Massalit in west Darfur. We found reasonable grounds to believe that they are targeting other non-Arab groups with the same intention. For instance, fighters on the ground are saying things like, “We decided not to leave any of them alive, not even the children”, referring to Massalit, or mocking dead bodies that litter the streets as “speed bumps” or “dirty dogs”. Many of these incitements are worse than in early 2000, the first genocide of the 21st century.
This is more than an internal armed conflict. We know that it is being fuelled by outside actors. We identified in our report that multiple outside actors are supporting the warring parties or fighters on the ground through smuggling arms or financing or political cover. The UAE is the largest backer and the most notorious. It was just confirmed, not only by the New York Times investigation but other sources, including the UN panel of experts, Amnesty, and other investigators, that the UAE is smuggling arms through Chad, along with heavy weaponry and drones. There are even hundreds of thousands of mercenaries who have been reported as fighting alongside the RSF. These are foreign mercenaries, so this is very much funded and fuelled by outside actors as well.
What can Canada do? Canada is not powerless to act, to intervene. Canada has a long tradition of civilian protection, peacekeeping and the responsibility to protect.
One, Canada can recognize this genocide for what it is. There has been no atrocity determination yet.
Two, it can invoke the responsibility to protect and it can lead on the protection of civilians through diplomacy and through dispatching a civilian protection mechanism in the areas where there are the most civilians at most risk.
Three, we can end all military exports to the UAE, pending a demonstrable halt to their arming of the RSF, the genocidal militia in Sudan, according to our treaty obligations under the Arms Trade Treaty and the Export and Import Permits Act.
Four, Canada has sanctioned only six individuals and entities connected to Sudan. This is the least out of any of Canada's main allies. It has yet to sanction 10 of the entities based in Sudan or the UAE that the U.S. has already sanctioned and that others have sanctioned. We will submit a list to the subcommittee afterwards.
Canada is well placed to take on a case unilaterally or with allies to the International Court of Justice against the UAE for complicity in breaching the genocide convention through the smuggling of arms to the genocidal militia. We are prepared to take on this case. We have pleadings already prepared and drafted.
Canada's immigration policy must respond to this unprecedented emergency. It must speed up the processing times to save at least some of the millions of Sudanese people displaced by this conflict. Not a single Sudanese displaced person has been resettled since the financially burdensome program was introduced in February, capped at 3,250 people. By contrast, as soon as Russia's war of aggression broke out, Canada launched an emergency family reunification program for Ukraine without eligibility or financial requirements and has approved nearly one million applications under this program.
These delays are costing lives, and we're talking about the most lethal famine in decades, genocide and the largest humanitarian catastrophe. I can't imagine a situation that demands an emergency resettlement program more. Instead, Canada has effectively closed its doors on Sudanese people and turned its back on Sudan. This widely disparate response to the war in Ukraine and to Sudan is a scandal of the first order and can only be explained by a discriminatory and, frankly, racist implementation of policy towards communities fleeing conflict.
Parliament should also revive the all-party save Darfur coalition, which was chaired by our founder, Irwin Cotler, or a broader coalition to prevent genocide and atrocity crimes. Canada can also monitor the incitement to genocide from here in Canada and implement the laws we have here to criminalize those acts. We can also ramp up humanitarian aid; only 50% of the required aid has reached Sudan out of the $2.1 billion that has been pledged. This can go directly, and should go directly, to the grassroots mutual aid initiatives on the ground or to emergency response rooms, which have only received 0.2% this year of the actual international aid.
Canada can lead on all these fronts and more.
Thank you so much for your time, and I look forward to the questions.
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Allow me to start off by thanking the witnesses.
I would like to point out, Mr. Diamond, that you were here in Ottawa the last few days before the summer recess for Parliament, being active. You did a media availability. Thank you so much for all the hard work you've put into this and for the excellent report that the centre has produced.
Allow me to start off with our witness from Amnesty International.
You did touch on the fact that the arms embargo is ineffective. I'm wondering if you could elaborate on that because, obviously, there's much more that we can do as a country. I'd be grateful if you could provide us with more guidance on the arms embargo.
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That's an excellent question.
I would say that these states are profiting from the suffering of the Sudanese people. For instance, for the UAE and for many countries, it's about seeking access to land and resources, the seaport. In particular, the gold trade is fairly large and active in the region. Gold is a major source of funding for countries like the UAE and Russia that are conspiring to basically extract it and to colonize and steal from the Sudanese people.
That's the way I would frame it. While Sudanese people are dying on a daily basis and being killed by these armed forces and militias, the enablers are getting away scot-free from their homes in Dubai, let's say, or Abu Dhabi, and they're actually making money off this because they're smuggling out the kind of natural resources and access that serves them.
I would say that's what makes it so pernicious, and that's what makes the initiatives that I mentioned before so important: going after, for instance, at the International Court of Justice or through sanctions, the entities and states that are benefiting from this conflict, to hold them accountable. This is a massive impunity gap.
It's not only about holding accountable fighters on the ground. It's about their enablers and sponsors. It's very clear that they would collapse and the fighting would end without the support of the UAE, for instance. It's the UAE more so than any other country, but as you mentioned, countries like Russia, China, Turkey, Iran and Serbia have also been identified as supporting it, though not to the same extent, in terms of finances, political backing, diplomatic cover, and of course, supplying heavy weaponry and drones. The UAE is now increasingly implicated in that and has to be called out, sanctioned and taken to court over these continued violations. Otherwise the war will continue.
These are the drivers of conflict, and that's why they are the key targets to look at.
If you could provide any additional information as to how you think these other countries could be held to account, that would be very much welcome.
Mr. Diamond, you touched on another thing, which was the family reunification program that we announced last year. Just to let you know, the Globe and Mail, in February 2024, had a headline that read, “Canada prepares to welcome thousands of Sudanese.” However, there were very few Sudanese who came here. That is very disconcerting.
Do you have any recommendations on that particular front, just to make sure that Canada does open its doors to people who are fleeing the situation in Sudan?
Thank you to the witnesses for their powerful and sobering testimony.
Briefings that I received on the crisis in Sudan suggest that the ongoing violence, combined with the humanitarian consequences, makes this likely to be the worst humanitarian crisis since the so-called “Great Leap Forward” in China in the 1950s. You talked about a scenario of mass starvation, potentially up to 12 million or 13 million people next year. To put that in context, that is well over five times the total population of the Gaza Strip.
I don't think very many Canadians are aware of the particulars of this crisis. I think it would be deeply troubling to many Canadians to find out some of the facts you shared. Tens of millions of people are affected by acute hunger already and, at a minimum, this is a situation that requires our serious attention and intense resolve and response.
It seems to me, based on what I read in your testimony today, that a critical step forward is to do more to block the flow of arms into Sudan by shaming and penalizing any country or non-state actor sending weapons to either side. Just briefly, do both witnesses agree with that in principle?
I'll proceed and dig into this a bit further. This is a proxy war, with different actors sending weapons in and waging a conflict at the expense of the Sudanese people. Many of the players are involved in fomenting conflict and violence in other parts of the world. Unsurprisingly, the governments of Iran and Russia are involved, but the UAE is a player that we have more of a relationship with, let's say, than some of the others. There are many very serious allegations about the UAE, such as that they are actively supporting the RSF, which is committing genocide. Also, there's some detailed analysis, in The New York Times, suggesting that the UAE is misusing the Red Crescent as a way of trying to cover for their efforts to smuggle arms into Sudan. My understanding of international law is that, if this is true, this would make the UAE guilty not only of supporting perpetrators of war crimes, but of war crimes themselves by misusing the Red Crescent.
Perhaps, Mr. Diamond, you can comment on the UAE's actions here and on what we can do to put maximum pressure on the UAE as part of a campaign to keep arms from flowing into Sudan.
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Thank you, Mr. Brunelle‑Duceppe.
There's no silver bullet. Canada claims to be a champion of human rights at the United Nations and on the international stage. It must therefore lead the way in renewing the fact-finding mission's mandate in Sudan. It must also push to extend the UN arms embargo to the entire country. Most importantly, Canada's resources and political influence must be used to get aid to those who need it. Only a coordinated international response and unrelenting pressure on the combatants, who are blocking and restricting access to life-saving aid at this time, can prevent the imminent mass famine and alleviate the suffering of millions. We cannot overemphasize that millions of people are suffering terribly right now and are at risk of becoming victims of war crimes and crimes against humanity. Canada and its international partners must therefore bring their full weight to bear to exert pressure and implement concrete solutions.
I'll reiterate what I said about the arms embargo. There is an embargo, but it's not working. It must be made effective. All the allies in the region are knowingly arming Sudan, the parts of Sudan experiencing conflict. Indirect arms sales are being made to other states, which then transfer the weapons. Sometimes, several states may be involved in that activity. It is therefore very important for Canada to ensure that the weapons and parts it sells are sold to countries that absolutely will not transfer weapons or parts, even non-lethal ones, to Sudan.
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Thank you very much for those clarifications, Ms. Langlois.
Among other things, you said that Canada should put pressure on the UN. This conflict did not start two weeks ago. It's been going for a while. We saw it coming. It developed, and since then it has only grown and gotten worse. Sudan is experiencing one of the worst famines of this century. So this is nothing new.
As a Quebec sovereignist, I'm telling you that Canada has a history when it comes to international human rights. We can think of Lester B. Pearson, or Brian Mulroney, who opposed apartheid.
My question is for both witnesses. Either one of you may know the answer. To your knowledge, has the ambassador and permanent representative of Canada to the UN, Bob Rae, made any representations regarding the conflict in Sudan? Have you heard anything from Mr. Rae?
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So what we know at the moment is that Canada's ambassador to the UN has not taken any action regarding the conflict in Sudan. I asked you the question and you answered that you had not heard about it. Maybe we'll do some research on our end. Some action may have been taken, but not to your knowledge, and Amnesty International is calling for greater pressure on our UN partners.
Mr. Diamond, in response to a question earlier, you said that one of the problems had to do with the processing times for people who want to leave Sudan for Canada. When I was deputy chair of the Special Committee on Afghanistan, we included in our report a recommendation that Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, or IRCC, should have a permanent emergency mechanism to act quickly in the event of an international crisis, be it an armed conflict or a natural disaster. In the case of Afghanistan, it took months, if not years, to bring people to Canada.
Do you think this mechanism, which is still not in place and was promised by and , should be created to help us respond to this type of crisis?
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Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank Mr. Diamond and Ms. Langlois for the incredible work that they and their organizations do on behalf of people around the world.
The data shows that only about half of the 2024 Sudan humanitarian response plan is actually funded, with $1.34 billion U.S. in unmet funding needs. To date, Canada's contribution to this plan represents 1.6% of funding commitments, despite our much larger share of the global economy. Do you believe Canada needs to increase its financial commitments to trusted humanitarian partners operating in Sudan and encourage other donors to do the same? Also, maybe you can comment on how the government's cuts to Canada's international assistance budget during a time of rising global violence, hunger and suffering are impacting our reputation as an international human rights leader.
I'll start with you, Mr. Diamond.
There are reports of sexual violence that have highlighted the conflict's disproportionate impact on women and girls, with ongoing allegations of rape, forced marriages, sexual slavery and trafficking, particularly in Khartoum, Darfur and Kordofan. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has warned that, as many civilians flee these conflict areas, both within Sudan and in neighbouring countries, women face increased vulnerabilities.
How can international efforts better address the specific vulnerabilities of women and girls in conflict zones in Sudan, and what measures could be taken to prevent sexual violence in areas where civilians are fleeing conflict?
Ms. Langlois, if you want to lead, go ahead. I'm happy to take more comments from Mr. Diamond as well.
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That's a very big question you're asking.
The issue of sexual violence against women and girls is a huge problem that is seen around the world in all conflicts, and has been since time immemorial.
What we can do at the moment is provide real humanitarian assistance to women and girls who are currently victims of sexual violence.
Again, I think Canada can engage in this and play a leadership role, not only in the current crisis but in general, to address this issue that is part of the conflicts. In addition, oversight mechanisms must be put in place. Then, of course, there's the whole issue of training the belligerent forces of the known and well-managed national armies. However, it is a long journey.
That said, Canada can play a very important role. Of course, people who commit these crimes need to be prosecuted and convicted.
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That's an excellent question.
It's catastrophic. Reuters also put out a special report on this. As we mentioned, Canada can seek to lead efforts at the UN to remove the consent of the state. A lot of times, countries say that Sudan has the right and that we need its consent, but there's no governing party right now. There's no effective legitimate leader right now who can lay claim to this.
This is a problem of international scope that demands our responsibility to protect civilians in the areas you mentioned, and the removal of obstacles or impediments to letting the trucks go through. This is something Canada and the House can demand—that the requirement for consent of state be removed—because these people are starving to death. It makes no sense to allow the Sudanese Armed Forces to continue blocking that aid. It's the same with the RSF.
I also want to quickly clarify something, because it sounds like there is some confusion in the room around it. Sudan is a massive country. The reason you hear about Darfur a lot is that the situation in Darfur is quite different. The RSF controls most of the region. In north Darfur, there's only one SAF garrison left and joint forces fighting off the RSF's siege. I talked about the RSF atrocities and the UAE's support for them. It's continuing the genocide and massacres of the Massalit, Fur and Zaghawa peoples. The UN found that 81% of the rape and sexual violence was committed by the RSF.
The conflict has to be understood. It's not simply two belligerents. They are committing different sorts of crimes. Whereas the SAF, like I said, is blocking the aid and potentially contributing to deaths by starvation and committing air strikes and war crimes, killing civilians in that context—
Thank you to both of the witnesses for appearing today.
We talked a lot about the UAE, but I want to talk a bit about Russia.
I read a report called “The Blood Gold Report”. It's about how Russia, through the Wagner Group, has raised $2.5 billion U.S. from trade in African gold since it invaded Ukraine in February 2022. It says:
In Sudan, “the Russian company” controls a major refinery that has allowed Wagner to become the dominant buyer of unprocessed Sudanese gold, with multiple accounts of Russian military transport planes shipping processed gold out of the country.
Does either of you want to speak about that, and the influence the Wagner Group is having in Sudan?
Mr. Diamond, I see you shaking your head. Go ahead.
If colleagues agree, I wouldn't mind taking a bit of a step back from the specific conflict and its contours in Sudan and taking a broader perspective.
Commentary opened up this discussion by describing 12 million people potentially dying from starvation, making this the biggest refugee crisis and the biggest starvation crisis of this century, and perhaps even in history. It deserves deep attention. Should the international conversation not be more affected by what we are seeing happen in this crisis in Sudan?
To our guests from both Amnesty International and Raoul Wallenberg, can you try to explain, from your perspective, why, despite your advocacy, your research, your policy recommendations and your appeals to governments around the world, this crisis is not getting the attention it deserves?
That's a very good question. Again, it's a very broad question.
Unfortunately, the conflict in Sudan is not the only humanitarian crisis that is not receiving the attention it should.
The reason is that the international system is broken. The United Nations is broken, the UN Security Council is broken because it is too politicized. It always has been, but it used to be more balanced. Now the decision-making parties at the UN General Assembly and at the UN Security Council no longer care about the balance of humanitarian law because it doesn't work for them anymore. Every state uses its veto as soon as something does not suit it. You can think of China, you can think of Russia, but you can also think of the United States.
The system is broken, and that's why everything becomes politicized and our attention goes elsewhere. Meanwhile, states on the Security Council are fuelling conflicts around the world, while we have our backs turned, while the spotlight, the cameras, the media are not shining a light on these conflicts.
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I think that's the ultimate question, and a very painful one to think about.
I just want to add, regarding the Wagner Group, that the Raoul Wallenberg Centre did submit a comprehensive sanctions filing with the government that included the Wagner Group. Unfortunately, the government didn't respond in a timely enough fashion. I want to put in there a recommendation to take these recommendations and to have quicker processing times for our sanction recommendations, because often the companies that are suggested to be sanctioned can switch hands, liquidate and evade accountability.
I also want to say, regarding the peace agreement question, that, in the past, the peace agreement has been bilateral, so any future agreement really needs to be comprehensive and inclusive of all parties, including those who have been historically marginalized and oppressed in Darfur; otherwise, it will continue to breed resentment and a kind of neglect.
In terms of the lack of attention, there's really no explanation for it, other than a dereliction of duty by everyone in any form of power or anyone who has a platform. There's also a lot of inaccurate information and a failure to even document basic information about Sudan.
There's no way to explain it other than a failure.
I do think that everyone around the table and the witnesses who are with us today share the same frustration over this conflict being completely under the radar, despite the fact that it is currently the conflict that has the greatest potential for death, if only in terms of famine.
We just had a discussion. I just heard your answers, namely that the UN, the United Nations, is broken, that the media attention is not there, that it is being directed to the Middle East, to Ukraine, to Russia.
Mr. Diamond, is the African Union's position on this matter known right now?
That's kind of what I was getting at; meanwhile, humanitarian aid is not getting there.
Sudan was probably already one of the places with the highest child malnutrition rate in the world before the conflict began. It was already estimated that 600,000 children were malnourished.
Right now, I would say that the major international players are playing Risk with Sudan, if I may use that expression.
All you're asking for—and this is the message I'm hearing today—is that these actors facilitate the entry of humanitarian aid and impose an arms embargo as an absolute must. If that were done, there may be some hope.
Did I understand you correctly?
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I think you said it. Unfortunately, it's kind of insidiously motivated by that. I can't really think of any other explanation. For the Ukraine program, there were no eligibility or financial requirements, nor any cap for the duration of the war. So, it's not a question of whether or not.... There's an ability to do that, and the precedent is there. That's all I'll say about that.
I also want to say, in terms of how Canada can lead, that it is strange that only four of the entities related to Sudan have been sanctioned. How is that possible, if the U.S. has sanctioned over 10 entities that Canada hasn't yet sanctioned?
Canada has also played a role at the ICJ. It's leading two cases there against Afghanistan and Iran for the downing of PS752. These are efforts that Canada.... You need a state to bring a case to the International Court of Justice, and that will really raise the profile of the Sudanese conflict and then initiate a process of accountability at the international level. We are willing to work with you on this.
I just want to say that Canada is very well placed and has experience in this area, and we're ready to work with Canada.
I want to thank both of the witnesses, and those who came before, for the very alarming testimony and for putting the spotlight on this. I think if Canadians knew more about it, they would want to do more.
I know Canada has already provided about $300 million in aid to Sudan and the surrounding area in the last two years. Our last budget has an additional $350 million for humanitarian aid.
Knowing that this is a human rights committee and it's not specifically dealing with development or some of the other recommendations, I noted in your opening remarks, Ms. Langlois, that you talked about the violations of international human rights and humanitarian laws, but because it's an internal conflict, you made the distinction in terms of the Geneva Convention and other kinds of international law.
I wonder if you and Mr. Diamond could specify which violations of international human rights laws are happening right now and what Canada can do to ensure that those violations stop.
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Thank you for your question.
Civilians are recklessly being singled out and targeted. Both parties to the conflict are positioning themselves in civilian areas to launch their attacks. So they put civilians at risk, and tens of thousands of civilians are being killed or injured.
We talked about sexual violence against women and girls, and there is also the fact that humanitarian aid is not getting through, since access is being blocked. Water or electricity infrastructure is also being targeted, which also affects civilian populations. All of these wrongdoings are condemned by international law, which also applies to a conflict such as the Sudanese conflict. Even if it is not a conflict between two states, which we would describe as an international conflict, that does not mean that the Geneva conventions and international law do not apply to it.
International law still applies to the conflict that is taking place within the borders of Sudan between the two belligerent forces on the territory.
We've heard powerful testimony today about tens of millions of people in Sudan displaced, starving or already killed.
We must do more here in Canada. We need to hold all violators of human rights accountable, whether they're on the ground in Sudan itself or foreign enablers. We've heard that the Government of Canada has been behind on imposing sanctions, so it's critically important that we tighten those up and, in the process, hold foreign enablers accountable as well.
I want to draw your attention to one aspect of recent New York Times reporting: “While not admitting direct support to the R.S.F., Sheikh Mohammed said he owed the paramilitary group's leader, Lt. Gen. Mohamed Hamdan, for sending troops to fight alongside the Emirates in the war in Yemen.” One way to think of the war in Sudan is that it's an extension of the war in Yemen with Iran and the UAE fighting for power and control. It seems, based on what I've read, that Iran would like resources in Sudan but also a strategic foothold, and that the UAE doesn't want Iran to have that strategic foothold. There are other relationships established in the context of the Yemen conflict that are spilling over.
Mr. Diamond, just very quickly, because I have limited time, what are your thoughts on that kind of frame and what does Iran want in Sudan specifically?