
Memorandum from Sudanese Political Forces and National Figures to the African Union Regarding Developments in Ending the War and Achieving Peace in Sudan
January 12, 2026
H.E. Mr. Mahmoud Ali Youssif
Chairperson of the African Union Commission
Esteemed Representatives of the Member States of the African Union Peace and Security Council
The undersigned—politicians, academics, researchers, and independent civil society activists—hereby submit this official memorandum to the African Union regarding the efforts to end the war and the realization of peace in Sudan. This letter serves as a formal response to the letter submitted by the “Somoud” alliance on January 6, 2026, under the mantle of “Democratic Civilian Leadership”. We express our categorical rejection of the content presented by the aforementioned alliance to the Chairperson of the AU Commission and the Peace and Security Council. Furthermore, we condemn the political blackmail practiced by this alliance and its persistent impersonation of the Sudanese people and their civil forces.
At the outset, we wish to highlight that the previous memorandum deliberately ignored the direct and destabilizing role of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) as a primary actor in the Sudanese conflict since April 2023. The UAE’s documented and continuous support for the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) militia constitutes an explicit threat to Sudan’s safety and territorial integrity, in blatant violation of the African Union’s Constitutive Act. We expected the African Union to adopt a decisive stance against this Emirati role, which prolongs the suffering in Sudan and impacts the wider continent and region. Regrettably, while international figures—such as U.S. Congresswoman Sara Jacobs and Senator Chris Van Hollen—and organizations like Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and the Washington Center for Human Rights have criticized this intervention, AU institutions remain silent about the UAE aggression on Sudan.
In Sudan, the signatories of the “Somoud” memorandum are directly or indirectly engaged in advancing the UAE’s agenda in the country. They promote biased initiatives and utilize media deception to serve Emirati interests in the Sudanese arena. These individuals persistently attempt to divert attention from or downplay the RSF’s atrocities, undermining their claims of civilian neutrality and exposing their role in a disinformation campaign for which the Sudanese people pay with increased suffering.
This reality is inseparable from the external influence network supporting the RSF, which seeks to entrench control over civilian areas, using citizens as hostages to blackmail the Sudanese state and impose the country’s fragmentation as a fait accompli. This aligns perfectly with the nature of Emirati policies in the region. Consequently, the “Somoud” alliance’s stance not only undermines local and international peace initiatives—as seen in their rejection of the Sudanese Peace Initiative, but also directly facilitates the UAE’s neo-colonial influence on the continent.
We affirm that any credible peace process must begin by dismantling the control of the Emirati-backed armed militia and condemning its use of foreign mercenaries to occupy Sudanese cities. We demand the African Union condemn these activities explicitly. The Peace process must ensure the state restores full control over its territory to protect civilians and prevent external hegemony over the political or security tracks. The “revolutionary” or “civilian” pretexts used by the previous signatories are unacceptable given their ties to the external parties funding and directing the conflict. This necessitates that the African Union exercise absolute neutrality and distance itself from external influences, including those evidenced during the Chairperson’s recent meeting with the Emirati Foreign Minister.
A viable roadmap for peace must prioritize civilian protection, which requires the total withdrawal of the RSF from all residential centers. The presence of these elements is the primary threat to citizens, as evidenced by massacres in El Fasher, Khartoum, Al Jazirah, and El Geneina. Areas under RSF control, such as Nyala, Zalingei, Babanusa, and El Nahud, have become lawless zones defined by a predatory war economy, ethnic cleansing, and sexual violence. Therefore, the restoration of security through the deployment of Sudanese police and the rule of law must precede any political power-sharing or quota systems.
In conclusion, we call upon the African Union to:
- Ensure all peace initiatives are predicated on civilian protection and legal accountability.
- Guarantee that African mediation does not become a vehicle for external influence or a compromise of Sudanese sovereignty.
- Coordinate fully with national initiatives and political forces to safeguard Sudan’s territorial unity.
- Condemn destructive external interventions and the use of mercenaries contracted by Emirati companies to fight in Sudan, which evoke the horrors of the colonial era.
Sustainable peace requires total national sovereignty and the severance of local ties to external support. We remind the African Union that its founding charter is built on non-interference in the internal affairs of member states. Overlooking the financing of cross-border militias threatens the entire continent’s principles of national liberation and invites new forms of proxy colonialism. We urge the AU to stand with Sudan in defense of sovereignty and refuse to yield to the political blackmail of the “Somoud” alliance and its external backers.
Please accept our highest regards.
Signatories:
Firstly: Political, Party, and Community Leaders
- Mohamed Abdullah Al-Douma – President, National Umma Party
- Moatz Osman Al-Fahal – Political Secretary, Original Democratic Unionist Party
- Dr. Al-Tijani Al-Sisi – President, National Movement Forces Alliance
- Mohamed Wada’at Allah – President, Coordination for a Return to the Founding Platform
- Dr. Yahya Hajj Nur – President, Sudanese People’s Party, and Secretary-General of the Nationalist Current
- Ambassador Ismail Kattar Abdul Karim – Assistant to the President of the National Umma Party for Legal and Constitutional Affairs
- Nur al-Din Barakat Sharif – Political Supervisor, Original Democratic Unionist Party
- Mohamed Al-Wathiq Abu Zeid – Political Secretary, Future Movement for Reform and Development Party
- Abdullah Fadlallah Ahmed – President, Misseriya Tribes Coordination Inside and Outside Sudan
- Balla Jouda Mohamed – Secretary-General, Misseriya Tribes Coordination
- Akasha Suleiman Saloum – President, The Third Front (Tamazuj)
- Dr. Mohamed Ismail Zero – Secretary-General, The Third Front (Tamazuj)
- Mohamed Ibrahim Hamed – President, National Front for Eastern Sudan Components
- Ambassador Mahjoub Mohamed Othman – Democratic Unionist Party
- Ahmed Al-Sinjak – Member of the Leadership Body, Original Democratic Unionist Party, and Party President in the United States
- Mawahib Al-Sayed Mohamed Ahmed – Leader, Original Democratic Unionist Party
- Salah Ahmed Idris Ibrahim – National Coordinator for Disarmament
- Amer Kurmi Slouf – Civil Forces Alliance of the Nuba Mountains
- Nazir Ali Ahmed Al-Nur – Community Leader
- Abdel Rahim Musa Al-Awad – Union of Sudan’s General Tribes
- Salim Attar Ismail – Gathering of Sons of Eastern Sudan
- Eng. Mohamed Abdul Karim Taqal – Bloc of Active Civil Forces
- Bakri Ahmed – Alliance of Revolutionary Resistance Committees
- Amir Harika Salim – Unity Youth Alliance
- Hussam Al-Atta – Youth for Sudan
Secondly: Civil Society and Human Rights Organizations - Umayya Yousif Hassan Abu Fadayah – Director, Sudanese Center for Human Rights and Media Freedom
- Jaafar Khidr – Civil Activist
- Nada Fadlallah Hassan – Secretary, Rural Women Development Organization
- Al-Mubarak Al-Rayyah Al-Sharif Mahmoud – Director, Khartoum Center for Social Peace and Media
- Nasrin Al-Khair Babiker – Secretary-General, Taj Organization for Freedom, Peace and Development
- Ismahan Jabbara – Sudanese Organization for Motherhood and Childhood
- Salima Mansour Karma – Darfur Women’s Development Organization
- Halima Abd al-Daim Mohamed – Secretary-General, Development Organization
- Abbas Idris Jaafar – Civil Society Organizations
- Mustafa Adam – Civil Society Activist
- Atef Sayed Ahmed – Solidarity with Sudan Campaign
- Suad Abdulaziz – Executive Director, “Decolonize Sudan” Initiative
- Dr. Suheir Ahmed Salah – National Women’s Group
- Arif Ahmed Ismail – Civil Society
- Khuloud Farajallah – Feminist Activist
- Zeinab Idris Al-Tayeb – President, Kordofan Women’s Alliance
- Abeer Ahmed Siddiq – Women’s Alliance for Peace and Unity
- Mahira Abdel Rahman Al-Makk – Feminist Advocate
- Nadia Mohamed Ali – Feminist and Political Activist
- Ikhlas Ahmed – Feminist Activist
- Manahal Ibrahim Al-Sayed – Political and Human Rights Activist
- Taha Al-Qurashi Abdul Azim – Human Rights Defender
- Mohamed Abdel Rahman Ahmed Salim – Former Judge and Human Rights Defender
Thirdly: Academics and Professionals - Prof. Mustafa Idris – Former Director, University of Khartoum
- Dr. Magdi Al-Jazouli – Academic
- Dr. Hassan Hajj Ali – Academic and University Professor
- Dr. Amjad Farid Al-Tayeb – Executive Director, Fikra Center for Studies and Development
- Dr. Salim Mohamed Al-Badri – Professor of Political Science
- Dr. Yahya Suleiman Al-Ja’ali – Professor of Sociology
- Dr. Ahmed Abdel Rahim Salman – Researcher and University Professor
- Dr. Mohamed Ahmed Adam Ali – Media Researcher
- Mohamed Ahmed Al-Sawi – Independent Political Thinker
- Abu Obeida Mohamed – University Lecturer
- Hussein Ibrahim Hamed – University Professor (Veterinary Medicine)
- Iman Bashir – Associate Professor
- Dr. Sana Suleiman Al-Faris – Sudanese Doctor (Berlin)
- Dr. Khalil Abdel Rahim Al-Darir – Consultant Anesthetist and Intensive Care
- Mohamed Naqd Mirghani – Doctor
- Mustafa Omar Hajj Al-Hussein – Academic
- Najat Mahjoub Abdel Qader Mohamed – University of Khartoum
- Aida Nasser – Lawyer
Fourthly: Media Professionals, Journalists, Writers, and Artists - Adel Al-Baz – Editor-in-Chief, Al-Ahdath Newspaper
- Waleed Bakri Kharshin – Editor-in-Chief, Al-Ittihadi Newspaper
- Amjad Abu Al-‘Ula – Film Producer and Director
- Magdi Abdulaziz – Editor-in-Chief, Al-Riwaya Al-Oula Newspaper
- Fadlallah Abdullah Rabeh Abu – Sudanese Freelance Journalist
- Sumayya Sayed Jadu Al-Hajj – Sudanese Journalist
- Imtithal Ahmed Al-Sheikh – Sudanese Journalist
- Makki Al-Maghrabi – Media Professional
- Rasha Al-Rashid Mahdi – Broadcaster and Deputy Director, Khartoum Center for Social Peace and Media
- Maher Mohamed Mokhtar – Media Professional and Sports Journalist
- Faris Ahmed Hassan Al-Jaid – Media Professional and Social Media Influencer
- Mokhtar Ali Al-Nur – Writer and Author
- Hashim Ahmed Hassab Al-Rasoul – Poet and Author
- Sabir Al-Sadiq Jamil – Musician
- Khaled Abdel Rahman Al-Hilu – Visual Artist
- Mayada Ahmed Qamar al-Din – Film Director and Filmmaker
Fifthly: Political Activists - Khalid Abdullah Mohamed – Political Activist
- Anas Mohamed Fadl – Political Activist
- Adam Mohamed Hassan – Activist and Political Analyst
- Mohannad Al-Ballal – Analyst on Sudanese Affairs
- Hala Kamrat – Expert in Conflict Resolution, Mediation, and Peacebuilding
- Sally Zaki – Writer and Political Analyst, Member of Civil Society (Democratic Bloc)
Sixthly: Diaspora Communities and External Alliances - Nizar Ata Al-Mannan Mohamed – President, Sudanese Community in Istanbul, Turkey
- Ahmed Abdulaziz Ahmed Burma – Sudanese Community in New Zealand
- Abdelazim Kodi – Sudanese Activist (Canada)
- Mohamed Al-Imam Mohamed Yousif – Sudanese Citizen, Canada
- Abdel Rahim Ahmed Mokhtar – Sudanese Citizen Refugee in Britain
- Ahmed Arabi – Alliance of Sudanese Revolutionary Forces (Norway)
- Abdulaziz Mohamed Salih – Sudanese Citizen (Switzerland)
- Abdelrahman Majed Al-Awad – Sudanese Citizen (Australia)
- Fattah Ahmed Said – Sudanese Citizen (Juba)
- Mudathir Suleiman Qureiballah – Sudanese Community in Senegal
- Saadiya Kuzam – Sudanese Women’s Group in Texas
- Ahmed Abdulaziz Ahmed Burma – Sudanese Community in New Zealand
Seventhly: Citizens, Businesspersons, Others - Hussam al-Din Abdullah Abdulaziz – Sudanese Citizen
- Mo’tasim Beidab – Sudanese Citizen
- Amal Mahjoub Mohamed Ahmed – Citizen
- Al-Bara’ Ahmed Abdel Rahman Hamida – Sudanese Citizen
- Ilyas Mohamed Al-Hassan – Sudanese Citizen
- Mohyeldin Mokhtar Al-Mahri – Sudanese Citizen (Western Sudan)
- Alia Hassan Mohamed Al-Hassan – Sudanese Citizen
- Sabir Othman Khalid – Businessperson
- Kamal Ahmed Ali – Businessperson
- Omar Hakar Kanji – Commodities Trader
- Sana Musa – Electronics Engineer
- Younis Adam Abdullah Mohamed – Sudanese Citizen
- Ilyas Mohamed Al-Hassan – Sudanese Citizen
- Mohamed Al-Imam Mohamed Yousif – Sudanese Citizen
- Alia Hassan Mohamed Al-Hassan – Sudanese Citizen



