Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 107— - SUDAN DEMOCRATIC TRANSITION, ACCOUNTABILITY, AND FISCAL TRANSPARENCY › § 10010
The President must not give aid (except help allowed under section 10005) to Sudan’s security and intelligence services until the President tells Congress in writing that Sudan has met certain required conditions. The Secretary of State may, when needed, give training or other help to professionalize those forces through groups like the Africa Center for Strategic Studies and the United States Institute of Peace. The President can allow specific help sooner if, at least 30 days before, he gives congressional committees a list of the activities and participants, explains why the waiver is in U.S. national security interests, and certifies the participants meet either section 2378d (State-funded programs) or section 362 of title 10 (Defense-funded programs). The required conditions include: progress on security-sector reform and laws; respect for human rights and steps to hold violators accountable, including for war crimes; civilian oversight and support for civilian government; no targeted attacks on minority groups and good faith peace negotiations; full humanitarian access; cooperation with UNHCR on displaced people and returns; and investigations and prosecutions for unlawful child recruitment. The certification must be unclassified but can have a classified annex. The rule ends on the earlier of 2 years after January 1, 2021, or when the President says a military-to-civilian rotation in the Sovereignty Council has happened.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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22 U.S.C. § 10010
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73