
Sudan has accused neighbouring Ethiopia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) of orchestrating drone strikes on its main airport, describing the assault as “direct aggression”.
The international airport, located in the capital, was hit on Monday, along with military installations in the Greater Khartoum area.
Recent drone strikes have shattered a period of relative calm in Khartoum, which came after the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) was pushed out by the Sudanese military last year.
Ethiopia has said accusations that it was involved in the airport attack are “baseless”. The UAE said the “unfounded accusations and deliberate propaganda” undermined efforts to resolve the conflict.
Sudan has recalled its ambassador to Ethiopia for “consultations” over the attack, Foreign Minister Mohieddin Salem said.
No-one was wounded in the attack, Sudan’s information minister told the Reuters news agency.
Sudan’s army said it had “conclusive evidence” that the drones were launched from Bahir Dar airport in Ethiopia, the state-owned Sudan News Agency (Suna) reported.
Sudanese military officials first accused the RSF of air attacks launched from inside Ethiopian territory in March.
They said they had tracked a drone, identified as Emirati property, entering Sudanese airspace from Ethiopia and eventually shot it down.
A Sudanese army spokesman alleged that they have now connected another drone, launched from the same airport, to Monday’s attack.
The UAE has in the past forcefully rejected claims that it provides military support to the RSF.
Responding to the latest accusations, a UAE official said the “fabrications” by Sudanese authorities were “part of a calculated pattern of deflection – shifting blame to others to evade responsibility for their own actions”.


