(The Yarmouk military complex in Khartoum, Sudan seen in a
satellite image made on 12 October, prior to the alleged attack.
Photograph : AP)
**
Satellite images of the aftermath of an explosion at a Sudanese
weapons factory this past week suggest the site was hit in an air
strike, a US monitoring group said Saturday.
The Sudanese government has accused Israel of bombing its Yarmouk
military complex in Khartoum, killing two people and leaving the factory
in ruins.
The images released by the Satellite Sentinel Project to the
Associated Press on Saturday showed six 52-foot wide craters near the
epicenter of Wednesday’s explosion at the compound.
Military experts consulted by the project found the craters to be
"consistent with large impact craters created by air-delivered
munitions", Satellite Sentinel Project spokesman Jonathan Hutson said.
The target may have been around 40 shipping containers seen at the
site in earlier images. The group said the craters center on the area
where the containers had been stacked.
Israeli officials have neither confirmed nor denied striking the
site. Instead, they accused Sudan of playing a role in an Iranian-backed
network of arms shipments to Hamas and Hezbollah. Israel believes Sudan
is a key transit point in the circuitous route that weapons take to the
Islamic militant groups in the Gaza Strip and Lebanon.
Sudan was a major hub for al-Qaida militants and remains a transit
for weapon smugglers and African migrant traffickers. Israeli officials
believe arms that originate in the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas go
through Sudan before crossing Egypt’s lawless Sinai desert and into Gaza
through underground tunnels.
The Satellite Sentinel Project is a partnership between the Enough
Project, a Washington-based anti-genocide advocacy group and
DigitalGlobe, which operates three commercial satellites and provides
geospatial analysis.
The project was founded last year with support from actor George
Clooney, and in the past has used satellite images to monitor the
destruction of villages by Sudanese troops in the country’s multiple war
zones.
Opened in 1996, Yarmouk is one of two known state-owned weapons
manufacturing plants in the Sudanese capital. Sudan prided itself in
having a way to produce its own ammunition and weapons despite United
Nations and US sanctions.
The satellite images indicate that the Yarmouk facility includes an
oil storage facility, a military depot and an ammunition plant.
The monitoring group said the images indicate that the blast
"destroyed two buildings and heavily damaged at least 21 others", adding
that there was no indication of fire damage at the fuel depot inside
the military complex.
The group said it could not be certain the containers, seen in images
taken 12 October, were still there when explosion took place. But the
effects of the blast suggested a "highly volatile cargo" was at the
epicenter of the explosion.
"If the explosions resulted from a rocket or missile attack against
material stored in the shipping containers, then it was an effective
surgical strike that totally destroyed any container" that was at the
location, the project said.
Yarmouk is located in a densely populated residential area of the
city approximately 11km southwest of the Khartoum international airport.
Wednesday’s explosion sent exploding ammunition flying into homes in
the neighborhood adjacent to the factory, causing panic among residents.
Sudanese officials said some people suffered from smoke inhalation.
A man who lives near the factory said that from inside their house,
he and his brother heard a load roar of what they believed was a plane
just before the boom of the explosion sounded from the factory.
In the aftermath of Wednesday’s explosion, Sudanese officials said
the government has the right to respond to what the information minister
said was a "flagrant attack" by Israel on Sudan’s sovereignty and right
to strengthen its military capabilities.
In a Friday speech marking Eid al Adha, Islam’s biggest holiday,
Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir called Israel "short-sighted,"
according to comments published by the Egyptian state-owned paper Al
Ahram. The president likened the incident to the 1998 bombing by
American cruise missiles of a Khartoum pharmaceutical factory suspected
of links to al-Qaida.
Some Israeli commentators suggested that if Israel did indeed carry
out an airstrike causing Wednesday’s blast, it might have been a trial
run of sorts for an operation in Iran. Both countries are roughly 1,000
miles (1,600km) away from Israel, and an air operation would require
careful planning and in-flight refueling.
(Associated Press , Saturday 27 October 2012)
Lancé le 19 décembre 2011, "Si Proche Orient" est un blog d'information internationale. Sa mission est de couvrir l’actualité du Moyen-Orient et de l'Afrique du Nord avec un certain regard et de véhiculer partout dans le monde un point de vue pouvant amener au débat. "Si Proche Orient" porte sur l’actualité internationale de cette région un regard fait de diversité des opinions, de débats contradictoires et de confrontation des points de vue.Il propose un décryptage approfondi de l’actualité .
Inscription à :
Publier les commentaires (Atom)
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire