Sudan war: US sanctions Colombian companies, individuals
The US says the sanctioned companies and individuals recruited former Colombian soldiers to fight in Sudan.
The United States imposed sanctions on Friday on five companies and individuals it said were involved in recruiting former Colombian military personnel to fight on behalf of a paramilitary group in Sudan.
"This network has fueled the conflict, which has given rise to one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises and famines," the Treasury Department said in a statement.
The United States also urged the Sudanese government army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) to accept a three-month humanitarian truce without conditions, Treasury said.
The brutal three-year war between the Sudanese army and the RSF has created what aid groups say is now the world's worst humanitarian crisis.
Implications of sanctions
Hundreds of former Colombian forces have gone to Sudan to support the RSF in both combat and technical roles, fighting in battles around the country, Treasury said.
Those targeted in Friday's sanctions include Fenix Human Resources SAS, a Bogota, Colombia-based employment agency, and its manager, Jose Libardo Quijano Torres; former Colombian Army Colonel Jose Oscar Garcia Batt, the owner of a Bogota-based recruiting company, Global Qowa Al-Basheria SAS and that company's manager, Omar Fernando Garcia Batte.
The sanctions mean all properties and interests of the designated people and companies in the United States are blocked.