Israel
was behind the bombing of a military factory that killed two people, claims
Sudanese Information Minister Ahmed Bilal Osman. Now, the Arab North African
state is threatening to respond in kind.
"We
think Israel did the bombing," Osman told a news conference, adding that
Sudan reserves “the right to react at a place and time we choose." He also
told reporters that his government may take the issue up with the United
Nations Security Council.
The
minister said four planes were involved in the attack at the Yarmouk military
manufacturing facility in south Khartoum, and claimed evidence recovered at the
scene points to Israel’s involvement.
The
Yarmouk complex was built in 1996, and is one of two known state-owned weapons
manufacturing facilities in the Sudanese capital.
Residents
from the area told local newspapers that they saw planes flying overhead just
before the explosion. The blast blew roofs off houses, shattered windows and
set nearby trees ablaze. Several people suffered from smoke exposure.
Thick
smoke blackened the sky over the complex, and firefighters fought the blaze for
hours.
It's not
the first time Sudanese officials have blamed such an incident on Israel.
One
person was killed when a car blew up on the country's Red Sea coast in May,
about a year after Sudan blamed Israel for an air strike on a vehicle in the
same area. Witnesses to the May incident said they heard a big blast that set
the car ablaze and left two holes in the ground.
In
January 2009, foreign aircraft struck a truck convoy reportedly laden with
weapons in the country’s east, killing dozens. The shipment was rumored to be
headed for Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip, though Sudanese
parliamentarians denied the claims.
Osman
told the news conference that his country was certain the previous attacks were
ordered by the Israeli government. “The main purpose is to frustrate our
military capabilities and stop any development there and ultimately weaken our
national sovereignty,” he said.
Israel,
as is its policy, has neither admitted nor denied carrying out the attack.
Khartoum
is seeking the removal of United States sanctions imposed in 1997 over support
for international terrorism, its human rights record and other concerns.
In 1998,
US cruise missiles bombed a Khartoum pharmaceutical factory suspected of links
to al-Qaeda in the wake of the terrorist group's bombings of American embassies
in Kenya and Tanzania that killed 224 people.
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