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UAE denies involvement in Sudan airport attack

By Thomson Reuters May 6, 2026 | 4:28 AM

CAIRO, May 6 (Reuters) – The United Arab Emirates denied allegations by Sudan that an Emirati drone had been used in an attack on Khartoum airport on Monday launched from ​Ethiopia, according to a statement by a UAE official late ‌on Tuesday.

Sudan has long accused the UAE of backing the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, which have been fighting the Sudanese army in a three-year-old civil war that has devastated the country. The Gulf state has denied this and said ‌it ​seeks an end to the conflict, one ⁠of the world’s deadliest.

Late on ⁠Monday, Sudan’s army spokesman alleged an escalation in UAE support, broadcasting images and flight paths he said showed Emirati-owned drones that had taken off from Ethiopia’s Bahir Dar airport and struck several ​locations in Sudan in March and May. Reuters was not able to independently verify the information.

Sudanese officials also said they were ⁠prepared to respond to the alleged violation.

Asked ⁠for comment by Reuters, the UAE official said: “These ​fabrications are part of a calculated pattern of deflection – shifting blame to ​others to evade responsibility for their own actions – and are ‌intended to prolong the war and obstruct a genuine peace process.”

Ethiopia in a statement had also denied the allegations.

In statements on Tuesday, Egypt and Saudi Arabia condemned the attack on Khartoum airport, which had ⁠recently re-opened to flights. Both countries warned against interference by Sudan’s neighbours.

Massad Boulos, the U.S. administration’s senior adviser for Arab and African affairs, also said ⁠external support to ‌either side of the conflict must end.

Sudan’s war erupted ⁠after the RSF and the Sudanese army fell out ​over ‌plans to integrate their forces and transition to ​democracy.

The RSF ⁠quickly took over Khartoum but was pushed out last year. It has since consolidated control of the Darfur region in the west, and opened a new front, also marked by repeated drone attacks, in the Blue Nile state along the border with Ethiopia.

(Writing by Nafisa Eltahir, Editing ​by William Maclean)