Selasa, 02 Mei 2023

Khartoum hospitals being hit as Sudan fighting intensifies - The Guardian

Fierce street fighting, including the use of heavy weaponry and artillery fire, has consumed centralKhartoum as worsening violence tests a deteriorating ceasefire.

Volleys of airstrikes and sounds of gunfire were audible in Khartoum’s twin city, Omdurman, overnight as clashes raged throughout the capital, and were particularly heavy in areas around major government and military infrastructure in the city centre.

Hospitals increasingly reported strikes on their premises, and an airstrike on the area outside East Nile hospital in north Khartoum killed at least three tea vendors as well as a child, leaving behind only a crater.

The Rapid Support Forces, a paramilitary group who have sought shelter in densely populated urban areas of the capital, blamed the Sudanese Armed Forces for violating the ceasefire with strikes on factories and medical facilities, including the East Nile hospital, where they said dozens of civilians were killed and injured.

The SAF, led by the country’s de-facto leader, Gen Abdel Fatah al-Burhan, claimed the RSF infiltrated the homes of soldiers and detained their families.

Both parties have said they are open to sending negotiators for talks in Saudi Arabia, with discussions limited initially to how to enforce a ceasefire amid fighting that has left more than 500 dead. The true number of casualties is unknown as most hospitals are unable to function fully, while a medical union described piles of bodies left in the streets as fighting continued around them.

Despite pressure to quell the violence as the two groups fought for control of the capital, civilians remained caught in the crossfire. There was little suggestion that either the SAF or the RSF would allow anyone representing the Sudanese populace to attend negotiations.

Ahmed Al-Mufti, a longtime human rights advocate based in Omdurman, said: “I think these negotiations will be difficult. But there needs to be a ceasefire as citizens are suffering so much, they need a permanent ceasefire to get life back to normal.”

Mufti said he believed any peace negotiations should build on discussions that took place before the fighting began, concerning the transfer of power to a civilian government. Burhan and his RSF rival, Gen Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, known as Hemedti, have shown an unwillingness to transfer power to civilian elements in Sudan’s political system, including collaborating on an October 2021 military coup.

Mufti said: “The ceasefire should be discussed within the context of the political framework agreed before, and to build on what was previously agreed upon. Unless the discussion is based on what was agreed on before, and each party’s reservations – these were the reason for this conflict, that some political forces wanted to impose on the others, and it’s not democratic.”

As battles raged across the capital and the Darfur region, civil society increasingly stepped in to help people. A coalition of unions and civil society groups founded an umbrella group, the Civil Front to Stop the War and Restore Democracy, demanding an immediate end to the fighting, a return to the political process towards civilian rule, an end to military rule, and security sector overhaul.

Sudanese civil resistance committees – localised political groups integral to the 2019 uprising that ended the reign of the former dictator Omar al-Bashir – were helping trapped civilians by distributing vital goods.

Mufti said people in areas outside Khartoum had begun sharing their details and inviting displaced people to seek safety with them.

“I think it’s most positive what’s happening. People are really afraid of the fighting and some are trying to flee, but it’s clear they can receive support from these people. It’s a very welcoming atmosphere, this will help citizens more than anything.

“I’m constantly receiving messages like this, saying: ‘Please come to our area and we’ll feed and accommodate you’. It’s wonderful; we haven’t seen anything like this before.”

He added: “The citizens really are the victims of this fighting. But there’s social support, even as they suffer more and more.”

Former diplomats admitted that Sudanese civilians were previously ignored amid the international community’s willingness to deal with the two generals who have now turned on one another.

Alexander Rondos, the former EU special representative for the Horn of Africa, told CNN: “We need to ask ourselves whether, early on, were we in too much of a hurry to find a solution which we thought was pragmatic, but actually tilted towards those who controlled all the money and the weapons – and that the civilians gradually got squeezed out. So that’s a lesson we’ve got to learn.”

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2023-05-02 13:02:00Z
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Senin, 01 Mei 2023

Sudan crisis: Air strikes hit Khartoum despite truce - BBC

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Air strikes have pounded Sudan's capital, Khartoum, despite a truce aimed at allowing civilians to flee.

The army said it was attacking the city to flush out its paramilitary rivals, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

The fighting intensified even as the warring sides said they would extend the truce by another three days.

More than 500 deaths have been reported with the true number of casualties believed to be much higher. Millions remain trapped in Khartoum.

Army commander Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and RSF chief Gen Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, better known as Hemedti, are vying for power - and disagree in particular about plans to include the RSF into the army.

The generals agreed a humanitarian truce after intensive diplomatic efforts by neighbouring countries, the US, UK and UN. It was extended, but did not hold.

However, it remains unclear on what they will do in the next stage of the deal arrived at with US and Saudi mediation, according to the army.

The country is now in a civil war, says Sudanese businessman and philanthropist Mo Ibrahim, and its conflict must not be allowed to spill over its borders and become regional.

"We don't want another Syria," he told the BBC, adding that it was difficult for either side to win outright.

BBC diplomatic correspondent Paul Adams, who is monitoring events from the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, says the fighting is concentrated mainly in the north of Khartoum, close to the confluence of the Blue and White Niles, but right across the city, people are huddled in their homes, wondering whether it is more dangerous to stay or leave.

The army will find it difficult to expel the RSF from Khartoum - for all the army's superior firepower, the paramilitaries are highly mobile and more suited to urban warfare, our correspondent adds.

Before the announcement of the extension on Sunday, the army said it had conducted operations against RSF troops north of the city centre.

Checkpoint 'gamble'

On Monday, the World Food Programme announced that it was resuming its operations in Sudan, reversing its decision to pull out two weeks ago, after three of its staff were killed when fighting erupted in Khartoum.

A Sudanese army vehicle at a checkpoint in Khartoum. Photo: 30 April 2023
AFP via Getty Images

Hamid Khalafallah, from the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy, is one of those unable to flee.

"When there is very loud bombing and it gets closer, we take shelter in the house, try to all come to a central room, far from windows, far from walls, and so on, and just lie on the floor until it passes.

"When it's a bit further, we try to use the quiet hours that we get - a couple of hours a day - to just quickly go out and get what we need which is also very risky but we have to do it," he told BBC Newsday.

Mr Khalafallah said his neighbourhood was dotted with RSF checkpoints, with people risking their lives every time they had to negotiate their way past.

"It's basically a gamble. Sometimes they let you through, sometimes they don't. Sometimes they shoot at you, sometimes they steal your things and it's very random," he added.

Mr Khalafallah said he has not had a "single drop of water" at his home since fighting started on 15 April, and he was getting it from neighbours who had wells at their homes.

The first major aid flight, laden with medical supplies, has arrived in the country.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) says a plane landed at Port Sudan with eight tonnes of relief supplies, including health kits for hospitals.

"With hostilities still ongoing, ICRC teams will need guarantees of safe passage from the parties to the conflict to deliver this material to medical facilities in locations with active fighting, such as Khartoum," a statement said.

More than 70% of health facilities in the capital have been forced to close as a result of the fighting that erupted on 15 April.

Foreign countries have been evacuating their nationals amid the chaos.

The UK government announced on Sunday that it would organise a final evacuation flight on Monday - two days after it said it had ended its operation to bring British nationals out. The Foreign Office (FCDO) advised those wishing to leave to travel to the evacuation point in Port Sudan before 12:00 (10:00 GMT). So far, 2,122 people have been evacuated, the FCDO statement said.

A US-organised convoy has reached Port Sudan to evacuate more US citizens by ship to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia. It said hundreds of Americans had already left, in addition to the diplomats evacuated by air a week ago.

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2023-05-01 11:37:54Z
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Minggu, 30 April 2023

Leak of unknown gas kills 11 in India - Sky News

Eleven people have died after a gas leak in northern India.

The leak happened in an industrial area in the city of Ludhiana, Punjab state.

Rajinder Pal Kaur Chhina, a member of the legislative assembly in Ludhiana, said at least nine people had also been taken to hospital.

A team from the National Disaster Response Force has been sent to the site along with a team of experts to determine the cause and source of the leak, she added.

The densely populated area has been sealed off and residents have been evacuated.

National Disaster Response Force personnel at the site of the gas leak

"The incident happened near a milk shop and a doctor's clinic although we cannot say for sure where the leak began," Ms Chhina told Reuters.

"People who came to buy milk in the morning fell unconscious outside."

Three of the bodies had "turned blue", local resident Anjan Kumar said in an ANI news agency video on Twitter.

Ludhiana Deputy Commissioner, Surabhi Malik, told the Press Trust of India news agency it was possible the gas may have spread from manholes.

"We are going to collect samples from manholes. It is quite likely that some chemical reacted with methane in manholes," she said.

National Disaster Response Force evacuate people following the gas leak. Pic: AP
Image: Pic: AP

The state's chief minister, Bhagwant Mann, said the leak came from a factory, tweeting: "All possible help is being provided."

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2023-04-30 15:22:09Z
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Sudan – live: Evacuation flights for British nationals end despite fears more remain trapped in Khartoum - The Independent

UK evacuations from Sudan could be 'impossible' once ceasefire ends, Cleverly warns

The final UK evacuation flight from Sudan departed from the Wadi Saeedna airfield near Khartoum at 10pm local time on Saturday, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) has said.

A statement on the government’s foreign travel advice for Sudan website said: “The UK government is no longer running evacuation flights from Wadi Saeedna airfield.

“The last evacuation flight departed the airfield at 2200 Sudan time on 29 April.”

It comes as a government minister said the evacuation mission has been “extremely successful” but cannot last “forever”.

At least 1,888 people on 21 flights have been evacuated from Sudan - the vast majority of them British nationals and their dependents - but thousands more British citizens may remain.

It comes as fighting has broken out again in Khartoum despite the extension of an armistice between the country’s two warring generals having been brokered in the early hours of Friday.

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In pictures: Saudi nationals are hoisted aboard evacuation vessel

Saudi naval and special forces are pictured hoisting evacuees aboard a vessel during a rescue operation from Port Sudan to Jeddah.

Heavy fighting again rocked Sudan’s capital as tens of thousands have fled the bloody turmoil and a former prime minister warned of the “nightmare” risk of a descent into full-scale civil war.

Army forces clashed with paramilitaries in Khartoum as deadly hostilities have entered a third week despite the latest ceasefire, which was formally set to expire at the end of the day.

Emily Atkinson30 April 2023 16:00
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209 Irish citizens and dependents evacuated from Sudan in total

A further 89 Irish citizens and their dependents have been evacuated from Sudan, bringing the total Irish evacuees to 209, the Department of Foreign Affairs has said.

The majority of Irish citizens evacuated by air in recent days have been carried on UK flights into Cyprus, the department said.

The UK Government had said its final flight departed from Wadi Saeedna airfield late on Saturday night.

It comes as a ceasefire in the conflict-stricken north African country appeared to falter, with residents reporting heavy explosions and gunfire breaking out again in the capital Khartoum despite the extension of the armistice between the country’s two warring generals.

Hundreds of people have died in the bloody conflict between the Sudanese army and paramilitary group known as the Rapid Support Forces.

Micheal Martin, the Irish deputy premier and Foreign Affairs Minister, said Ireland’s Emergency Civil Assistance Team (Ecat) operation in Cyprus and Djibouti is now to be withdrawn.

The mission, named Operation Piccolo, has involved Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) officials being stationed in the countries with the aim of assisting in the evacuation.

Ireland has also received help from France and Spain to airlift Irish citizens, residents and visa holders to safety.

Members of the Defence Forces’ Special Operations Forces unit and the Army Ranger Wing supported the operation.

“On deployment, the team secured the DFA personnel on the ground, liaised with key actors in the airport and assisted DFA in the processing and evacuation of identified Irish citizens/dependents,” the Defence Forces said in a statement.

“The team were also on standby to provide medical assistance if required.”

Ireland will now maintain an “enhanced multi-location consular presence” for citizens who remain in Sudan - operating from Dublin, Nairobi, Cairo, Amman, Riyadh and Addis Ababa.

The department said embassies remain in close contact with any citizens in Sudan who have requested assistance.

“I wish to thank the ECAT team and all those involved in our consular response,” Mr Martin said.

“Our primary aim has been to offer our citizens every assistance through what has been an extremely difficult and challenging time.

“Our experienced consular teams in Dublin and in the region will continue to actively respond to the needs of our citizens as the situation evolves.

“I would like to thank our EU partners, the UK, Jordan, Norway and Djibouti for their strong cooperation in this challenging mission,” the Tanaiste added.

Citizens have been urged to follow the Embassy of Ireland in Kenya on Twitter (IrlEmbKenya) for updated advice.

<p>Sudan</p>
Maryam Zakir-Hussain30 April 2023 15:14
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Emergency aid supplies reach Sudan, as fighting sputters on

An aircraft carrying eight tons of emergency medical aid landed Sunday in Sudan to resupply hospitals devastated by more than two weeks of fighting between forces loyal to rival generals.

The supplies are enough to treat hundreds of wounded, as the civilian death toll from the countrywide violence topped 400. The conflict erupted on April 15 between the nation’s army and its paramilitary force, and threatens to thrust Sudan into a raging civil war.

More than two-thirds of hospitals in areas with active fighting are out of service, a national doctors’ association has said, citing a shortage of medical supplies, health workers, water and electricity.

On Sunday, the aircraft carrying medical aid took off from Jordan and landed in the city of Port Sudan, said the International Committee of the Red Cross.

The supplies, including anesthetics, dressings, sutures and other surgical material, are enough to treat more than 1,000 people wounded in the conflict, the ICRC said.

“The hope is to get this material to some of the most critically busy hospitals in the capital” of Khartoum and other hot spots, said Patrick Youssef, ICRC’s regional director for Africa.

The Sudan Doctors’ Syndicate, which monitors casualties, said Sunday that over the past two weeks, 425 civilians were killed and 2,091 wounded. The Sudanese Health Ministry on Saturday put the overall death toll, including fighters, at 528, with 4,500 wounded.

Some of the deadliest battles have raged across Khartoum. The fighting pits the army chief, Gen. Abdel Fattah Burhan, against Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, the head of a paramilitary group known as the Rapid Support Forces.

The generals, both with powerful foreign backers, were allies in an October 2021 military coup that halted Sudan‘s fitful transition to democracy, but they have since turned on each other.

Ordinary Sudanese have been caught in the crossfire. Tens of thousands have fled to neighboring countries, including Chad and Egypt, while others remain pinned down with dwindling supplies. Thousands of foreigners have been evacuated in airlifts and land convoys.

On Sunday, fighting continued in different parts of the capital where residents hiding in their homes reported hearing artillery fire. There have been lulls in fighting, but never a fully observed cease-fire, despite repeated attempts by international mediators.

Over the weekend, residents reported that shops were reopening and normalcy gradually returning in some areas of Khartoum as the scale of fighting dwindled after yet another shaky truce. But in other areas, terrified residents reported explosions thundering around them and fighters ransacking houses.

Youssef, the ICRC official, said the agency has been in contact with the top command of both sides to ensure that medical assistance could reach hospitals safely.

“With this news today, we are really hoping that this becomes part of a steady coordination mechanism to allow other flights to come in,” he said.

Youssef said more medical aid was ready to be flown into Khartoum pending necessary clearances and security guarantees.

Maryam Zakir-Hussain30 April 2023 14:45
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Countries rush to evacuate foreign citizens from Sudan

The conflict between Sudan‘s army and a paramilitary group called the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has triggered a rush to evacuate foreign diplomats and citizens.

Several countries have taken nationals out by air, while some have gone via Port Sudan on the Red Sea, about 800 km (500 miles) by road from Khartoum. This is the status of some countries’ efforts:

UNITED STATES

U.S. forces evacuated American and some foreign diplomats on April 22.

A convoy organized by the U.S. government arrived at a Sudanese port city on Saturday, evacuating U.S. citizens, local staff and others, a U.S. State Department spokesperson said.

Washington has previously said it was positioning naval assets to assist evacuations if necessary.

Britain said it has evacuated 1,888 people, mostly British nationals and their dependents, on 21 flights since Tuesday. The government decided the last evacuation flight would leave on Saturday evening, citing a decline in demand from British nationals and continued volatility on the ground.

The government had estimated there were about 4,000 Britons in Sudan. It evacuated its diplomats and their families on April 22.

Cyprus said it had activated a humanitarian rescue mechanism at Britain’s request to let third countries use it for reception and repatriation of foreign citizens evacuated from Sudan. Cyprus is home to two large British military bases.

Egypt has evacuated a total of 6,399 Egyptians, 1,072 of whom were evacuated on Friday. The Egyptian Foreign Ministry said on Thursday some 16,000 people had crossed from Sudan to Egypt, including 14,000 Sudanese citizens.

Germany said on Wednesday it had ended its operation to evacuate people from Sudan, with over 700 people flown out of the country, including around 200 German citizens. Germany’s evacuation mission brought out people from more than 30 countries, including Belgian, British, Dutch, Jordanian and U.S. citizens as well as Germans.

The French government said on Thursday that it had so far evacuated a total of 936 people from Sudan. Those included not only French nationals but also Britons, Americans, Canadians, Ethiopians, Dutch, Italians and Swedes.

The United Nations secretary-general thanked France for its “vital assistance” in transporting 400 U.N. personnel and their dependents out of Sudan.

Italian military planes flying from Djibouti evacuated 83 Italians and 13 others, including children and the Italian ambassador. Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said some Italian NGO workers and missionaries had decided to stay in Sudan, while 19 others had been taken to Egypt.

NETHERLANDS

About 100 Dutch nationals have been evacuated from Sudan since April 23, Foreign Minister Wopke Hoekstra said. Half left on four Dutch evacuation flights to Jordan, which also carried about 70 people from 14 other countries.

The Netherlands aims to evacuate a total of around 150 Dutch nationals and has supplied two military planes to the international effort, which are also available for other nationalities.

SWITZERLAND

Switzerland has shut its embassy and evacuated all Swiss staff and their families.

UNITED ARAB EMIRATES

The United Arab Emirates evacuated its citizens, other nationalities and humanitarian cases from Sudan by plane on Saturday. Around 128 evacuees, including British and U.S. citizens, landed in the capital Abu Dhabi.

Russia has not yet announced any evacuation of its embassy or its nationals from Khartoum. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the Russians in Sudan were in close contact with Moscow.

All Japanese people who wished to leave have been evacuated, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said.

A further 363 Indonesian citizens evacuated from Sudan arrived home on Sunday on a second flight by the country’s flag carrier Garuda Indonesia, the country’s foreign ministry said.

A first group of Indonesian evacuees arrived back in the country on Friday, and a total of 748 citizens have been evacuated from Sudan as of Sunday.

China said most Chinese nationals have been safely evacuated in groups to neighbouring countries. The defence ministry deployed naval ships to pick up and evacuate citizens on Wednesday.

The foreign ministry said between Tuesday and Thursday, nearly 800 people were transferred by sea and more than 300 travelled to neighbouring countries by land.

The Chinese consulate-general in Jeddah issued a notice on Wednesday advising citizens who planned to evacuate to Saudi Arabia to enter through the Jeddah Islamic Port.

More than 1,200 Indians evacuated from Sudan had arrived in Jeddah in Saudi Arabia as of Thursday, and would soon be repatriated to India, the country’s junior foreign minister V. Muraleedharan said.

Canada conducted its first evacuation operation in Sudan on Thursday, airlifting over 100 people, including Canadians and other nationals, on two flights from the war-torn North African country, senior government officials said.

Canada would deploy about 200 troops to coordinate evacuations from war-torn Sudan, Canadian Defence Minister Anita Anand said on Wednesday. About 180 Canadians had already been evacuated with the help of other countries.

There are about 1,800 Canadians in Sudan, out of which about 700 have requested assistance from the foreign ministry, according to the Canadian government.

Chad conducted its first evacuation flights from Sudan carrying more than 200 people, including dozens of children, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said on Friday.

Ukraine said it had rescued 87 of its citizens - most of them pilots, aircraft technicians and their families - among a total of 138 civilians, who also included citizens of Georgia and Peru.

Kenya’s foreign affairs ministry said on Thursday the government had evacuated 342 people who arrived in Jeddah in Saudi Arabia from Port Sudan.

Iran’s foreign ministry said on Saturday 65 Iranian citizens had left from Port Sudan, through Jeddah, to Iran.

Maryam Zakir-Hussain30 April 2023 13:30
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ICYM: US conducts 1st evacuation of its citizens from Sudan war

Hundreds of Americans fleeing two weeks of deadly fighting in Sudan reached the east African nation’s port Saturday in the first U.S.-run evacuation, completing a dangerous land journey under escort of armed drones.

American unmanned aircraft, which have been keeping an eye on overland evacuation routes for days, provided armed overwatch for a bus convoy carrying 200 to 300 Americans over 500 miles or 800 kilometers to Port Sudan, a place of relative safety, U.S. officials said.

The U.S., which had none of its officials on the ground for the evacuation, has been criticized by families of trapped Americans in Sudan for initially ruling out any U.S.-run evacuation for those among an estimated 16,000 Americans in Sudan who wish to leave.

Maryam Zakir-Hussain30 April 2023 13:00
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Red Cross arrives in Sudan

Red Cross aid has arrived in Port Sudan.

This is the first shipment of humanitarian aid to arrive in the war-torn country since clashes exacerbated, killing hundreds of civilians.

Maryam Zakir-Hussain30 April 2023 12:25
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In pictures: Civilians wait at sea port to be evacuated from Sudan to escape the conflict

<p>Civilians wait at sea port to be evacuated from Sudan to escape the conflicts, in Port Sudan</p>

Civilians wait at sea port to be evacuated from Sudan to escape the conflicts, in Port Sudan

<p>Saudi Royal Navy ship docks at sea port to evacuate civilians from Sudan, in Port Sudan</p>

Saudi Royal Navy ship docks at sea port to evacuate civilians from Sudan, in Port Sudan

Maryam Zakir-Hussain30 April 2023 11:42
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Ex-Sudanese PM warns conflict risks becoming ‘nightmare for world’ as civilian death toll hits 411

Airstrikes rocked parts of Sudan’s capital Khartoum on Saturday despite the extended ceasefire by the country’s two warring factions, as the former Sudanese prime minister urged both sides to get together for peace talks.

Terrified residents in some areas of the city reported explosions nearby and fighters ransacking houses, although residents in other areas said shops were reopening as the scale of the fighting dwindled.

Clashes were continuing around the presidential palace as well as the state broadcaster’s HQ and a military base in Khartoum.

The country’s former prime minister Abdalla Hamdok on Saturday urged for both sides to come together for peace talks to stop a full-blown civil war on the scale of the Libya and Syria conflicts.

Maryam Zakir-Hussain30 April 2023 11:00
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UK will continue to support British nationals still in Sudan, transport secretary says

The UK will continue to provide support for British nationals in Sudan now that evacuation flights have ended, the transport secretary has said.

Mark Harper told Sky News’s Sophy Ridge On Sunday programme: “The evacuation that we have conducted is the longest and largest evacuation of any western nation.

“We have taken out 1,888 British nationals, which I think is a testimony to the hard work of both those on the ground who have put themselves at risk and also those working at HQ to get that evacuation in place.”

He added: “We have now got some staff based at Port Sudan which is where we are going to continue providing consular support for British nationals that have chosen to remain in the country.”

Maryam Zakir-Hussain30 April 2023 10:32
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What is happening in Sudan and why? The war and conflict explained

Tension had been building for months between Sudan’s army and the RSF, which together toppled a civilian government in an October 2021 coup.

The friction was brought to a head by an internationally-backed plan to launch a new transition with civilian parties. A final deal was due to be signed earlier in April, on the fourth anniversary of the overthrow of long-ruling autocrat Omar al-Bashir in a popular uprising.

Both the army and the RSF were required to cede power under the plan and two issues proved particularly contentious: one was the timetable for the RSF to be integrated into the regular armed forces, the second was when the army would be formally placed under civilian oversight.

Joe Sommerlad reports:

Maryam Zakir-Hussain30 April 2023 09:40

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2023-04-30 14:14:30Z
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‘We tried to stop her’: Kenyan teenager tells how cult starved his mother - The Guardian

Two years ago, Issa Ali’s mother took all her belongings and left her family to join followers of the charismatic church leader Paul Mackenzie Nthenge in the Shakahola forest in south-east Kenya.

“He told them that’s where Jesus’ second coming will happen,” the 16-year-old said.

When he saw his mother again earlier this year, he said she was “nearly unrecognisable”, and had gone from being well built to shockingly frail.

“She told us it could be the last time we would see her, that her earthly life had lost all meaning and that she would be going to heaven soon. We tried to stop her, but couldn’t – she wasn’t herself at all,” Ali said.

The next time he heard of his mother was when his friends told him last week that she had been found dead in shallow graves in the forest, although her death has not yet been officially confirmed to him.

Ali’s mother’s apparent fate is just one story among scores in the case of a “starvation cult” – led by Nthenge – that has gripped and shocked Kenyans since police began unearthing corpses in the forest about two weeks ago.

On 15 April, one day after police raided the forest following a tip-off, Nthenge was arrested on suspicion of luring his followers into the remote area and brainwashing them into fasting to the death in order to “meet Jesus”.

The Shakahola forest has been declared an active crime scene and is cordoned off. A dusk to dawn curfew is in place. Nthenge is in police custody pending a court hearing, as are a few other men suspected of conspiring in the mass killing.

Hassan Musa, a Kenya Red Cross regional manager, said that by Friday 410 people had been reported missing by their loved ones, including 227 children under the age of 18 years. So far more than 100 bodies have been discovered.

As the scale of the deaths emerged last week, the town of Malindi, roughly 50 miles from the forest and known for its sandy white beaches and Swahili-inspired architecture, was thrown into a state of unease.

Fear and speculation dominated conversations in market stalls, bars and hotels as distressed families filled in missing person reports at police stations, or queued at public hospitals and even morgues in an attempt to find out if they had lost a loved one to the cult.

Some had travelled hundreds of miles, including Rogers Mwibo, 30, who had come from the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. Mwibo said his understanding was that two of his missing family members were probably dead and that the whereabouts of a third were unknown.

Mwibo came to the town after watching families of the cult’s victims on TV describe similar behavioural changes in their loved ones to those he had witnessed in his mother before she went missing.

“After Mum joined the church, she used to talk about Jesus all the time,” he said. “She used to even tell me to quit my job because it is not important, saying that I should follow her because Jesus is coming back soon.”

Also in Malindi was Joyce Makori, 38, who counted herself among the fortunate few after finding her husband, Daniel, alive on a roadside by the Shakahola forest.

The couple had grown apart after nearly a decade of marriage when he left her and his children for the cult, though they occasionally spoke over the phone. Makori said that in recent years she had been disturbed by his behaviour. For instance he was adamant, she said, that the world would be ending in June this year.

When news broke of the bodies being found, she decided to try to find him. In the days just before his rescue last week, she said he gave the sense over their phone call that he was under threat.

“Where it has reached, I am going to die,” she recalled him saying. “They have taken away my phone and suspect that I am sharing information outside. On this path I am on I could either be captured, die in the forest or be killed … I can’t leave.”

Makori said she had had a tough time trying to persuade the local authorities to help her locate her husband. She carpooled to Shakahola with 10 other people who also wanted to look for their families, and eventually got some help from the police once she had determined his general location.

Many other cult followers are still believed to be in the forest. Local activist Victor Kaudo, who helped tip off authorities to the cult’s activities, has raised concern over the pace of the rescue missions. The activist and some followers’ families say that exhuming bodies has been prioritised over trying to rescue survivors.

“Everyday we are losing lives,” said Kaudo. “There are many more people there who need our help.”

President William Ruto, whose administration has been perceived as religious-leaning, strongly condemned Nthenge’s cult as a fringe movement, comparing rogue pastors like Nthenge to terrorists who “use religion to advance weird, unacceptable ideology”.

Rescue teams report that Nthenge’s following had wide reach: his followers were not only locals but people from across the country, with a handful from other African countries, including Tanzania, Uganda and Nigeria.

Thirty-four cult followers have been rescued so far, a number in a critical condition. A few others died before they made it to the hospital. The survivors – some of whom tried to resist rescue efforts – were taken to private facilities, such as local schools, where they are receiving counselling. Sources in close contact with the victims say that a number of them have refused to address recent events, and that others are traumatised or don’t buy into suspicions of wrongdoing on Nthenge’s part.

Additional reporting by Ventura Kireki

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2023-04-30 13:37:00Z
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Sevastopol fuel depot blast was preparatory to Ukrainian counter-offensive - The Telegraph

A Ukrainian drone strike that destroyed an oil depot in occupied Crimea was part of Ukraine’s preparations for its counter-offensive, a military spokesman has said.

Natalia Gumenyuk, a Ukrainian military spokesman, said Russian logistics were being targeted to undermine morale and spread panic.

“This work is preparatory to the large-scale full-scale offensive that everyone expects,” she told Ukrainian media on Sunday.

Aerial and naval drone attacks on Sevastopol have worried residents, holidaymakers and the Russian navy.

Last year, the Russian navy withdrew its main submarine force to Novorossiysk, 180 miles away on the Russian mainland coast to avoid drone attacks.

Following the attack on Saturday on the fuel depot, Russian media later reported traffic jams over the Crimea Bridge as residents and holidaymakers fled.

'Russians don't feel peace'

Sevastopol is significant as it is home to Russia’s Black Sea Fleet.

In 2014, it hosted Vladimir Putin when he announced Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea.

Ms Gumenyuk said that Russians “don’t feel peace in the bays of Sevastopol” any more.

Ukraine’s military said that the drone attack had destroyed 40,000 tonnes of fuel. Russian officials confirmed the drone strike and said that nobody had been injured in the attack.

Huge flames engulf the fuel depot in Crimea Credit: AP

The strike on the fuel depot comes as Ukrainian officials talk up the start of their much-anticipated counter-offensive, possibly aimed at recapturing the peninsula.

On Saturday evening, in an interview with Swedish media, Volodymyr Zelenksy said that although Ukraine has not yet received all the sophisticated weapons it had asked for, it would shortly launch its counter-offensive.

“There will be a counter-attack, and I think it will succeed,” he said. “Have we had enough armaments for that? I would say that we are on the way to the fact that we are.”

Ukraine accused of shelling village

Russian officials in occupied Melitopol, regarded as the “Gateway to Crimea”, have reported a build-up of Ukrainian soldiers and also on increased incursions by Ukrainian patrols across the Dnipro River, which forms the frontline.

And officials in the Bryansk region of southern Russia on Sunday also accused Ukrainian forces of shelling a village near the border and killing four people. Ukraine has denied responsibility.

Villages in Bryansk and Belgorod have been hit several times since the start of the war.

“Four civilians have been killed,” Governor Alexander Bogomaz said on the Telegram messaging app. Two other citizens were being treated in hospital, he added.

Mr Bogomaz earlier said that one residential building had been completely destroyed and two other houses partially destroyed.

Mr Bogomaz blamed the incident on “Ukrainian nationalists”. Ukraine almost never publicly claims responsibility for attacks inside Russia and on Russian-controlled territory in Ukraine.

Both sides deny targeting civilians in the 14-month-old Russian invasion on Ukraine.

Russia’s Bryansk region borders Ukraine. The village of Suzemka, where the incident occurred, is around 10 km (6.2 miles) from the border.

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2023-04-30 14:38:00Z
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‘We tried to stop her’: Kenyan teenager tells how cult starved his mother - The Guardian

Two years ago, Issa Ali’s mother took all her belongings and left her family to join followers of the charismatic church leader Paul Mackenzie Nthenge in the Shakahola forest in south-east Kenya.

“He told them that’s where Jesus’ second coming will happen,” the 16-year-old said.

When he saw his mother again earlier this year, he said she was “nearly unrecognisable”, and had gone from being well built to shockingly frail.

“She told us it could be the last time we would see her, that her earthly life had lost all meaning and that she would be going to heaven soon. We tried to stop her, but couldn’t – she wasn’t herself at all,” Ali said.

The next time he heard of his mother was when his friends told him last week that she had been found dead in shallow graves in the forest, although her death has not yet been officially confirmed to him.

Ali’s mother’s apparent fate is just one story among scores in the case of a “starvation cult” – led by Nthenge – that has gripped and shocked Kenyans since police began unearthing corpses in the forest about two weeks ago.

On 15 April, one day after police raided the forest following a tip-off, Nthenge was arrested on suspicion of luring his followers into the remote area and brainwashing them into fasting to the death in order to “meet Jesus”.

The Shakahola forest has been declared an active crime scene and is cordoned off. A dusk to dawn curfew is in place. Nthenge is in police custody pending a court hearing, as are a few other men suspected of conspiring in the mass killing.

Hassan Musa, a Kenya Red Cross regional manager, said that by Friday 410 people had been reported missing by their loved ones, including 227 children under the age of 18 years. So far more than 100 bodies have been discovered.

As the scale of the deaths emerged last week, the town of Malindi, roughly 50 miles from the forest and known for its sandy white beaches and Swahili-inspired architecture, was thrown into a state of unease.

Fear and speculation dominated conversations in market stalls, bars and hotels as distressed families filled in missing person reports at police stations, or queued at public hospitals and even morgues in an attempt to find out if they had lost a loved one to the cult.

Some had travelled hundreds of miles, including Rogers Mwibo, 30, who had come from the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. Mwibo said his understanding was that two of his missing family members were probably dead and that the whereabouts of a third were unknown.

Mwibo came to the town after watching families of the cult’s victims on TV describe similar behavioural changes in their loved ones to those he had witnessed in his mother before she went missing.

“After Mum joined the church, she used to talk about Jesus all the time,” he said. “She used to even tell me to quit my job because it is not important, saying that I should follow her because Jesus is coming back soon.”

Also in Malindi was Joyce Makori, 38, who counted herself among the fortunate few after finding her husband, Daniel, alive on a roadside by the Shakahola forest.

The couple had grown apart after nearly a decade of marriage when he left her and his children for the cult, though they occasionally spoke over the phone. Makori said that in recent years she had been disturbed by his behaviour. For instance he was adamant, she said, that the world would be ending in June this year.

When news broke of the bodies being found, she decided to try to find him. In the days just before his rescue last week, she said he gave the sense over their phone call that he was under threat.

“Where it has reached, I am going to die,” she recalled him saying. “They have taken away my phone and suspect that I am sharing information outside. On this path I am on I could either be captured, die in the forest or be killed … I can’t leave.”

Makori said she had had a tough time trying to persuade the local authorities to help her locate her husband. She carpooled to Shakahola with 10 other people who also wanted to look for their families, and eventually got some help from the police once she had determined his general location.

Many other cult followers are still believed to be in the forest. Local activist Victor Kaudo, who helped tip off authorities to the cult’s activities, has raised concern over the pace of the rescue missions. The activist and some followers’ families say that exhuming bodies has been prioritised over trying to rescue survivors.

“Everyday we are losing lives,” said Kaudo. “There are many more people there who need our help.”

President William Ruto, whose administration has been perceived as religious-leaning, strongly condemned Nthenge’s cult as a fringe movement, comparing rogue pastors like Nthenge to terrorists who “use religion to advance weird, unacceptable ideology”.

Rescue teams report that Nthenge’s following had wide reach: his followers were not only locals but people from across the country, with a handful from other African countries, including Tanzania, Uganda and Nigeria.

Thirty-four cult followers have been rescued so far, a number in a critical condition. A few others died before they made it to the hospital. The survivors – some of whom tried to resist rescue efforts – were taken to private facilities, such as local schools, where they are receiving counselling. Sources in close contact with the victims say that a number of them have refused to address recent events, and that others are traumatised or don’t buy into suspicions of wrongdoing on Nthenge’s part.

Additional reporting by Ventura Kireki

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2023-04-30 13:24:00Z
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