Tag: RFS

  • Nairobi in The Crosshairs: US Sanctions File Exposes RFS Arms Chief Operating Under Kenyan Passport

    Nairobi in The Crosshairs: US Sanctions File Exposes RFS Arms Chief Operating Under Kenyan Passport

    A routine update to the United States Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctions register has detonated a diplomatic grenade beneath Nairobi, revealing that Algoney Hamdan Dagalo Musa, the youngest brother of Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF) commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, known as Hemedti, has been operating with a Kenyan passport.

    The document, numbered AK1586127, appears alongside Sudanese travel papers and an Emirati identification number in a memo quietly published by the Treasury on February 19, 2026.

    The disclosure transforms what Nairobi has long framed as principled, even-handed mediation in Sudan’s catastrophic civil war into something far more uncomfortable: a capital city whose passports are being used by a man Washington has formally designated as the chief logistics architect of a genocide.

    The Man Behind the Weapons

    Algoney is not merely a famous brother. He is, by Washington’s own accounting, the operational engine of the RSF’s war machine. As the militia’s procurement director, he has been the critical node connecting battlefield demand to international supply.

    Algoney Hamdan Dagalo Musa
    Algoney Hamdan Dagalo Musa

    According to the US Treasury, he controlled RSF front companies including the OFAC-sanctioned Tradive General Trading, which imported vehicles to Sudan on behalf of the RSF. Those vehicles were retrofitted with machine guns before being deployed against civilian populations across Darfur.

    Washington sanctioned him in October 2024 for “leading efforts to supply weapons to continue the war in Sudan,” describing how his actions directly fuelled the RSF’s siege of El Fasher, a city of nearly two million people in North Darfur.

    The European Union followed suit on January 29, 2026, placing him on its own designations list. The updated Treasury memo, published alongside fresh sanctions against three RSF commanders over documented atrocities in El Fasher, now adds a Kenyan passport to his known identity portfolio, a detail that turns a bilateral diplomatic embarrassment into a question of international complicity.

    Algoney also maintained access to an AZ Gold bank account in the UAE holding millions of dollars, according to the US Treasury, underscoring the scale of the financial architecture he commanded from his base in Dubai, from where he extended the RSF’s reach across borders and balance sheets.

    What a Passport Means in a Sanctions Era

    In contemporary conflict, the logistics commander is as decisive as the general. Territory is seized by fighters but sustained by access to finance, supply chains and international mobility.

    A sanctioned individual operating under a legitimate third-country passport is not merely a bureaucratic anomaly. It is a mechanism of evasion. Passports enable sanctioned actors to move money, secure residence, open accounts and build rear bases far from the front line.

    That Kenya’s government document appears in a US Treasury sanctions file is damning not only because of what it reveals about Algoney’s movements, but because of what it implies about how that passport was obtained.

    Kenyan citizenship documents are not handed out casually. The existence of passport AK1586127 in the name of a man simultaneously holding Sudanese travel papers and Emirati residency, while directing arms flows into the world’s largest humanitarian crisis, raises questions that Nairobi’s foreign ministry will find extremely difficult to answer.

    A Pattern, Not an Incident

    The revelation does not emerge from a vacuum. It lands on top of a mountain of accumulated evidence pointing to Kenya’s systematic proximity to the Dagalo family and the RSF’s broader political project.

    In January 2024, President William Ruto hosted Hemedti himself in Nairobi as part of a regional tour that drew formal protest from Sudan’s internationally recognised government.

    President Ruto holds talks with RSF leader general Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo in State House, Nairobi
    President Ruto holds talks with RSF leader general Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo in State House, Nairobi

    Talk of a close personal relationship between Ruto and Hemedti intensified further when Ruto travelled to Juba, South Sudan, on his presidential jet accompanied by Abdulrahim Dagalo, the RSF’s deputy commander and another sanctioned brother of Hemedti.

    Then, in February 2025, RSF leaders convened in Nairobi, where they signed a charter for the formation of a parallel government in Sudan, a move that prompted Khartoum to recall its ambassador and ban Kenyan tea imports. Sudan’s foreign ministry was explicit in its accusation, stating that Ruto had placed personal and commercial interests with the militia’s regional sponsors above bilateral relations.

    Those accusations of commercial entanglement carry particular weight. Kenya’s former deputy president Rigathi Gachagua publicly claimed that Ruto was involved in the gold trade run by Hemedti, describing how gold extracted from territories under RSF control was brought to Nairobi and then moved to Dubai.

    The claim, made on Kenya’s KTN News, has never been substantively refuted by State House.

    The UAE Thread

    Running through every dimension of this story is the United Arab Emirates. Kenya concluded a comprehensive economic agreement with the UAE, the RSF’s primary external sponsor, in January 2024, with Abu Dhabi committing to double investments in Kenya.

    Nairobi was simultaneously awaiting a 1.5 billion dollar UAE loan to cover budget deficits.

    A January 2024 report by a UN independent panel of experts on Darfur explicitly documented the UAE’s role, detailing its provision of military hardware, financial aid, and logistical backing to the RSF. The UAE denies arming the RSF.

    Yet Algoney, the man coordinating that hardware supply, is a Dubai-based businessman operating under a Kenyan passport with an Emirati ID.

    The geometry of this arrangement, Kenyan diplomatic cover, Emirati financing, RSF operational control, now has a document number attached to it: AK1586127.

    Senators, Waldorf Astoria and a Visit to Washington

    The complications extend even beyond East Africa. In October 2025, Algoney travelled to Washington DC to represent the RSF at the so-called Quad talks, composed of the United States, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, aimed at advancing peace in Sudan.

    He reportedly remained in Washington after those talks concluded, staying at the Waldorf Astoria, even as RSF forces were systematically massacring civilians in Sudan.

    US Senators Jeanne Shaheen and Cory Booker subsequently wrote to Attorney General Pam Bondi, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent demanding an investigation into Algoney’s stay.

    Their letter questioned whether US persons, including hotels, transportation services and financial institutions, had engaged in prohibited dealings with a sanctioned individual.

    The question of which travel document Algoney used in Washington has not been publicly answered. The revelation that he holds a Kenyan passport alongside Sudanese documents gives that question new urgency.

    The Mediation Illusion

    Kenya has consistently maintained that its engagement with RSF leadership constitutes mediation rather than alignment.

    Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi described the hosting of RSF political events as “compatible with Kenya’s role in peace negotiation.” The argument has worn progressively thinner with each revelation.

    Kenya was removed as lead mediator in the Sudan conflict by the Intergovernmental Authority on Development in December 2023, following Sudan’s objections over Ruto’s perceived bias.

    Its candidate for the African Union Commission chairmanship, Raila Odinga, was defeated in early 2025 by Djibouti, a country whose economy is a fraction of Kenya’s, in what analysts widely attributed in part to Nairobi’s regional conduct.

    The country that once hosted liberation movements and helped negotiate the peace agreement that created South Sudan now finds its travel documents listed in a US Treasury designation for a man accused of supplying weapons to a force the United Nations this week described as displaying the hallmarks of genocide in Darfur.

    As Sudan’s war grinds on, leaving millions displaced and thousands dead, even the smallest bureaucratic artefact can cast a long diplomatic shadow. Passport number AK1586127 is no small artefact. It is a paper trail that leads directly to Nairobi.

    Kenya’s government had not responded to requests for comment at the time of publication.

  • The Two Generals Have No Regard for Life and This Sudan War Is Turning To A Carnage, Ruto Warns

    The Two Generals Have No Regard for Life and This Sudan War Is Turning To A Carnage, Ruto Warns

    President William Ruto has called for global efforts to stop the raging war in Sudan and cautioned that it is escalating into human carnage.

    The President said the combatants on both sides are digging in as innocent lives are lost in the conflict and a human catastrophe ensues.

    “The war in Sudan is heading towards carnage and is already in the realm of human catastrophe,” he said on Saturday at State House, Nairobi.

    He made the remarks during a joint press briefing with Slovenian President Nataša Pirc Musar, who is in the country for a three-day State Visit.

    The conflict involves the Sudanese armed forces, led by General Abdel-Fattah al-Burhan, and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RFS) led by General Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo.

    President Ruto censured both generals for doing little to stop the war and end the suffering of their people.

    “The two generals have no regard for human life. All levers need to be pulled, regionally and globally, to stop the carnage and the human suffering in the Sudan,” President Ruto said.

    On her part, President Musar said Slovenia would work with Kenya and other international partners to resolve conflicts in Africa and beyond.

    “We must discuss, be open in dialogue, and strive to find solutions,” she said.

    She said she shares President Ruto’s vision of a multilateral world order at a time when global institutions are being tested by new policies.

    “Slovenia and Kenya have been working together and cooperating at the multilateral forum, especially the United Nations, the only one we have,” she said.

    This was President Musar’s first visit to the continent.

    She is accompanied by Slovenia’s Special Envoy for Africa Ambassador Frank Hoot and other senior officials.

    The two Presidents witnessed the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding on political consultations.

    The two leaders also agreed to deepen cooperation across sectors, including agriculture, education, digital transformation, health, environment, trade, and climate action.

    President Ruto welcomed the participation of a Slovenia business delegation and the hosting of the Kenya-Slovenia Business Forum.

    “These engagements will strengthen business linkages and unlock new trade and investment opportunities in pharmaceuticals, ICT, clean energy, and agro-processing,” he said.

    In addition, the two countries have agreed to work together to maximise the benefits of the Kenya-EU Economic Partnership Agreement, which came into force in July 2024.

    He welcomed President Musar to Sunday’s Madaraka Day ceremony, which will be held in Homa Bay County.

    Present were Prime Cabinet Secretary and Minister for Foreign Affairs Musalia Mudavadi, Environment Cabinet Secretary Deborah Barasa, and other senior government leaders.

  • Sudan’s RSF, Allies Sign Charter In Nairobi To Form Parallel Government

    Sudan’s RSF, Allies Sign Charter In Nairobi To Form Parallel Government

    Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces signed a charter with allied political and armed groups late on Saturday to establish a “government of peace and unity”, signatories al-Hadi Idris and Ibrahim al-Mirghani told Reuters.

    Among the signatories to the charter is Abdelaziz al-Hilu, a powerful rebel leader who controls vast swathes of territory and troops in South Kordofan state, and who has long demanded that Sudan embrace secularism.

    Such a government, which has already drawn concern from the United Nations, is not expected to receive widespread recognition, but is a further sign of the splintering of the country during a civil war that has lasted almost two years.

    The RSF has seized most of the western Darfur region and parts of the Kordofan region in the war, but is being pushed back from central Sudan by the Sudanese army, which has condemned the formation of a parallel government.

    Idris, a former official and head of an armed group, said the government’s formation will be announced from inside the country in the coming days.

    According to the text of the charter, the signatories agreed that Sudan should be a “secular, democratic, non-centralised state” with a single national army, though it preserved the right of armed groups to continue to exist.

    The charter said the government did not exist to split the country, but rather to unify it and to end the war, tasks it said the army-aligned government operating out of Port Sudan had failed to do.

    General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, head of the paramilitary RSF, which has been accused of widespread abuses including genocide, was hit with sanctions by the U.S. earlier this year.

    Dagalo had previously shared power with the army and civilian politicians as part of an agreement following the ouster of Omar al-Bashir in 2019. The two forces ousted the civilian politicians in a 2021 coup before war erupted between them over the integration of their troops during a transition to democracy.

    The conflict has devastated the country, creating an “unprecedented” humanitarian crisis and driving half the population into hunger, with famine in multiple areas.

    The signing took place in a closed event, in contrast to a flashier kick-off earlier this week in Nairobi.

    Both events were hosted in Kenya, drawing condemnation from Sudan and domestic criticism of Kenyan President William Ruto for plunging the country into a diplomatic melee.

    The Sudanese government has accused the United Arab Emirates of backing the RSF militarily and financially, charges U.N. experts and U.S. lawmakers say are credible. The UAE denies the accusation.

    Sudan earlier this week passed changes to the country’s constitutional document, giving the army expanded powers. General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan says the army would be announcing its “war cabinet” soon.

    (Reuters)