http://www.jpost.com/Defense/Sudan-reportedly-arrests-national-for-allegedly-spying-for-Israel-346219
Sudan reportedly arrests national for allegedly spying for Israel
By JPOST.COM STAFF
03/23/2014 15:13
According to the daily *Al-Intibaha*, the man in question helped Israel act
against military targets in Sudan.
A Sudanese newspaper is reporting on Sunday that security forces arrested a
citizen of the African country on suspicion of spying for Israel, Israel
Radio reported.
According to the daily *Al-Intibaha*, the man in question helped Israel act
against military targets in Sudan.
The report said that Sudanese authorities were monitoring Sudanese
nationals who illegally migrated to Israel a decade ago and were recently
repatriated to Sudan.
According to the report, Sudan suspects Israeli authorities are training
African infiltrators who entered Israel illegally so that they could serve
as informants upon their return home.
Israeli military officials have accused Sudan of serving as a transport hub
for Iranian weapons destined for the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.
Earlier this month, the Israel Navy intercepted a ship that Iran was using
to smuggle dozens of long-range rockets to Gaza.
Missile ships and navy commandos from the Flotilla 13 unit, backed by the
air force, raided the Klos-C cargo ship, which was carrying Syrian-
manufactured M-302 rockets.
The rockets originated in Syria, according to Military Intelligence
assessments. Iran reportedly flew the rockets from Syria to an Iranian
airfield, trucked them to the seaport of Bander Abbas, and shipped them to
Iraq, where they were hidden in cement sacks. The ship then set sail for
Port Sudan, near the Sudanese-Eritrean border, on a journey that was
expected to last some 10 days.
Had the shipment not been intercepted, the rockets could have been unloaded
at Port Sudan and taken overland, through Egypt into Sinai, and through
smuggling tunnels into the Gaza Strip.
Two years ago, Sudan accused Israel of carrying out an airstrike in the
country, causing a huge explosion and fire at an arms factory in Khartoum
that killed two people.
Sudan, which analysts say is used as an arms-smuggling route to the
Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip via neighboring Egypt, has blamed Israel for
such strikes in the past, but Israel has either refused to comment.
Received on Sun Mar 23 2014 - 12:09:36 EDT