Showing posts with label Wadi Saeedna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wadi Saeedna. Show all posts

Saturday, June 24, 2023

Sudan: Army outnumbered on Khartoum's streets

Report at BBC News World Africa

Published Saturday 24 June 2023 - here is a full copy:


Sudan conflict: Army outnumbered on Khartoum's streets


IMAGE SOURCE, 

GETTY IMAGES


The Sudanese army's infantry battalions have hardly been present on the streets of Khartoum during the two months-long conflict that has raged in the country, leaving much of the capital under the control of the rival paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).


This is despite the fact that the army is made up of about 200,000 soldiers, roughly twice the size of the RSF.


Yet the army is heavily outnumbered on the streets of Khartoum, as well as the two cities across the River Nile - Bahri and Omdurman.


RSF fighters were initially moving the three cities in their armed pick-up vehicles, but they now mostly do so in ordinary cars. 


Huge numbers of people have complained on social media about the RSF stealing their cars from their homes. The suspicion is that the RSF is using them to avoid being hit by air strikes.


With its airpower being its greatest strength, the military has been constantly carrying out strikes to weaken the RSF. Although they are believed to have killed hundreds of civilians, they have not prevented the paramilitaries from advancing in Khartoum, Bahri and Omdurman.


In a serious blow to the army, RSF fighters carried out an assault earlier this month on al-Yarmouk, one of Sudan's biggest military complexes, where arms were manufactured and stored.


While a fire raged at the complex for days, the RSF declared that it had seized control of it, which was confirmed by local residents. The military, however, has not confirmed the loss of the complex. 


It launched a counter-offensive, but could only manage in briefly wresting control of a vitally important bridge that linked RSF fighters in Omdurman to those in Khartoum and Bahri.


The RSF is also in control of other key sites in and around the three cities, including:

  • the main oil terminal, which the paramilitaries have turned into their base
  • the state media's headquarters, giving the RSF control of its radio airwaves, although the army has managed to retain control of the TV station by broadcasting from elsewhere
  • a large part of the presidential complex
  • much of the international airport, which has been shut since the conflict started.

The headquarters of the spy agency was also said to have been occupied by the RSF early in the conflict, but it is unclear who is currently in control of it. 


The military is known to have held on to a few key places - the most important of which are its headquarters and the airbase in Wadi Saeedna, from where its fighter jets fly to hit the RSF.


Troops have dug long and deep trenches to prevent the paramilitaries from overrunning the two locations.


"Their attempt to attack us does not have any effect now. The shells they fire fall on trees, or are cold by the time they land on our side," an officer said.


History of racism


About two million residents, out of around 10 million, have fled the once-peaceful cities, abandoning their homes, shops and offices. Some of them have been shelled and bombed, others have been occupied and ransacked, with air-conditioners and furniture among the items carted away by the RSF.


For some, the failure of the infantry battalions to make significant battlefield gains is not surprising, as Sudan is not a democratic state with a well-trained professional army.


The army - like many other sectors of society - is still bedevilled by Sudan's history of racism, slavery and colonialism.


It dates back more than two centuries when Ottoman and Egyptian conquerors established an army of slaves.


Recruitment from mostly poor black African communities continued under British rule, and has remained so throughout the post-independence era. Some of the soldiers are, in fact, descendants of slaves.


Under the three decades-long rule of ex-President Omar al-Bashir, black Africans were rarely accepted in Sudan's military college, with applicants required to mention their ethnic groups.


As a result, only a few have risen to senior ranks, with the army largely under the control of generals from the Arab and Nubian elites bordering Egypt.

IMAGE SOURCE, 

GETTY IMAGES

Image caption, 

Both residential and commercial areas have been devastated by the fighting


Soldiers earn a mere $11 (£8.5) to $16 a month, in contrast with the generals who have enriched themselves by setting up companies and factories that have given them control of 80% of the economy, according to Sudan's short-lived civilian Prime Minister Abdallah Hamdok.


Because of their low pay, some soldiers even joined the RSF to fight - at one point, as part of the Saudi-Emirati coalition in Yemen, in exchange for vast sums of cash.


RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan "Hemedti" Dagalo became a big gold trader when his forces took over Sudan's most lucrative gold mines in 2017, and control of the border with Chad and Libya.


Sudan's army chief of staff did not like it - he wanted the money from the gold trade to go to strengthening the regular forces, but Bashir had confidence in the RSF, giving Hemedti the nickname "Himayti", meaning "My Protector".


Training camps were set up near Khartoum. Hundreds of Land Cruiser pick-up trucks were imported and fitted with machine guns.


With an estimated 80,000 to 100,000 men and more than 10,000 armed pick-up trucks, the RSF became Sudan's de facto infantry.


Arabs from Darfur form the backbone of the RSF. They appear to believe that it is now their turn to rule - especially after their pivotal role in helping the military fight the Darfuri rebels in the 2000s. 


One of the RSF's greatest strength lies in the fact that many of its "battalions" are made up of members of the same family or ethnic group, so they fight ferociously to protect each other.


In contrast, the defence minister has been forced to call for the mobilisation of retired officers and soldiers to beat back the RSF.


His appeal was met with derision by many Sudanese, who saw it as further proof of the army's weaknesses.


The reality is that Sudan's army, rather than fighting wars on its own, has long relied on militias. This is something it did in the decades-long civil war, which ended with South Sudan gaining independence in 2011, and more recently in Darfur, where Arab militias were accused of committing a genocide.


Now those militias - heavily armed by the military - have come back to haunt it, plunging Sudan into its latest crisis. 

Related Topics

Sudan


More on this story

Why an accountant has taken up arms in Darfur
Published 17 May 2023


What is going on in Sudan? A simple guide
Published 24 April 2023


How unsung heroes are keeping Sudanese alive
Published 21 April 2023


The two generals fighting over Sudan's future
Published 17 April 2023



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Sunday, May 21, 2023

Sudan's military fights to keep Wadi Saeedna airbase

Hat tip with thanks to Cameron Hudson for this toys for the boys' war pr0n. I wonder if this technology, combined with satellite imagery, is the "international-supported ceasefire monitoring mechanism" being hinted at.

___________________________________

MEANWHILE, SAF's fighting to keep Wadi Saeedna airbase. Read more.

Report at BBC News

By Zeinab Mohammed Salih, Khartoum

Dated Sunday 21 May 2023 - full copy:


Sudan conflict: Army fights to keep Wadi Saeedna airbase, residents say


Sudan's army is resisting an attempt by paramilitaries to advance towards its main airbase near the capital Khartoum, residents have said.


The airfield is used by the military to carry out air strikes on the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), and was also used by foreign governments to evacuate their nationals early in the conflict.


The fighting comes despite the announcement of a new seven-day truce.


Previous ceasefires have collapsed within minutes of being called.


A US-Saudi statement said the latest truce would come into effect on Monday evening, and would be different as it provides for a "ceasefire monitoring mechanism".


The US and Saudi Arabia have been brokering talks between the army and the RSF in the Saudi city of Jeddah for the past two weeks in an attempt to end the conflict that broke out on 15 April.


Most people I spoke to in Khartoum said a ceasefire would hold only if international monitors - backed by United Nations (UN) peacekeepers - are deployed.


In a sign of their lack of confidence in the latest ceasefire deal, bus loads of residents are continuing to flee Khartoum and its sister cities across the River Nile, Bahri and Omdurman, as there has been no let-up in the fighting.


RSF fighters in about 20 trucks are positioned east of the Nile, and are trying to cross a bridge to reach the Wadi Saeedna airfield.


The Sudanese military has retaliated by firing heavy artillery.


The battle has been going on for several days, but it has escalated.


"It feels like doomsday from early this [Sunday] morning. I think they will torture us until this ceasefire comes into effect," said a resident in Bahri's Khojalab suburb.


The military cannot afford to lose control of the airfield, as it is key to its strategy of pounding the RSF from the air as it fights to regain control of Khartoum and the other two cities.


An air strike also took place in Omdurman on Sunday, and explosions could be heard in its southern areas.


Earlier, the US State Department acknowledged previous failed attempts at brokering peace in Sudan, but said there was a key difference this time.


"Unlike previous ceasefires, the agreement reached in Jeddah was signed by the parties and will be supported by a US-Saudi and international-supported ceasefire monitoring mechanism," it said, without giving more details.


Sudan's military said it was committed to the agreement. The RSF has not commented.


The deal also allows for the delivery of humanitarian aid.


Stocks of food, money and essentials have fast declined and aid groups repeatedly complained of being unable to provide sufficient assistance in Khartoum.


Both the regular army and the RSF have been urged to allow the distribution of humanitarian aid, restore essential services and withdraw forces from hospitals.


US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Twitter: "It is past time to silence the guns and allow unhindered humanitarian access.


"I implore both sides to uphold this agreement - the eyes of the world are watching."


View original: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-65662939


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Sunday, May 14, 2023

Sudan's govt allocates 3 airports for humanitarian aid

THE Sudanese government announced Friday (12 May] that it had allocated three airports to facilitate the arrival of humanitarian aid.


The airports in Port Sudan and Wadi Seidna, as well as Khartoum International Airport, will serve as entry points for humanitarian aid after maintenance, said the Council of Ministers, the cabinet, in a statement. 


Read more in report from BigNewsNetwork.com


By Xinhua (China View Daily) 


Dated Saturday 13 May 2023, 18:30 GMT+1 - full copy:


Sudanese gov't allocates 3 airports for humanitarian aid

© Provided by Xinhua


KHARTOUM, May 13 (Xinhua) -- The Sudanese government announced Friday that it had allocated three airports to facilitate the arrival of humanitarian aid.


The airports in Port Sudan and Wadi Seidna, as well as Khartoum International Airport, will serve as entry points for humanitarian aid after maintenance, said the Council of Ministers, the cabinet, in a statement.


The cabinet called on all national and foreign voluntary organizations and relevant authorities to coordinate with a special committee it formed to ensure the delivery of humanitarian aid to all affected citizens.


Khartoum International Airport, Sudan's main airport, went out of service after being bombarded during clashes between the Sudanese Army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).


The decision to allocate airports is part of efforts to implement a commitment to protect civilians, signed by the Sudanese Army and the RSF in the Saudi port city of Jeddah on Thursday following the start of peace talks on May 6.


In the declaration, the conflicting parties vow to "achieve a short-term ceasefire to facilitate the delivery of emergency humanitarian assistance and restoration of essential services."


International organizations and authorities have welcomed the deal to protect civilians.


"While humanitarian workers, most notably local partners, have continued to deliver in very difficult circumstances, the secretary-general hopes this declaration will ensure that the relief operation can scale up swiftly and safely to meet the needs of millions of people in Sudan," said Stephane Dujarric, chief spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.


The UN chief reiterated his call for an immediate ceasefire and expanded discussions to achieve a permanent cessation of hostilities, the spokesman said.


The United Nations would spare no effort to assist in the declaration's implementation and will continue to deliver humanitarian aid, ceasefire or not, he added.


Meanwhile, Libya's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation said the declaration "represents a courageous step by both sides of the crisis to commit to protecting civilians in Sudan."


The ministry reaffirmed Libya's keenness to restore stability in Sudan and to encourage the Sudanese Army and the RSF to abide by their commitments in the declaration.


It also called for reinforcing the agreement between the Sudanese rivals by additional measures, "especially in the path of responding to urgent humanitarian needs."

© Provided by Xinhua


More than 164,000 people have sought refuge across borders since the outbreak of the military conflict in Sudan on April 15, showed the UN Refugee Agency. The International Organization for Migration estimates some 736,000 people have been internally displaced within Sudan since the start of the conflict. Almost 3.8 million people were displaced within Sudan before the outbreak of violence.


According to the United Nations, about 15.8 million Sudanese, or one-third of Sudan's population, will need humanitarian aid in 2023, and the figure is likely to increase.


The deadly clashes have left at least 550 people dead and 4,926 others wounded, according to the figures released by the Sudanese Health Ministry in early May.


View original: https://www.bignewsnetwork.com/news/273830211/sudanese-govt-allocates-3-airports-for-humanitarian-aid


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Wednesday, May 10, 2023

Sudan presidential palace blown up in military strike?

NOTE from Sudan Watch Editor: This news just in but I can't verify it. It's behind a paywall at The Times online so I subscribed in order to read the report. After doing so, I still can't access the full report. Maybe it's propaganda that somehow found its way into the website. Here's what I saw.

Report from The Times

By Fred Harter, Port Sudan

Dated Tuesday 09 May 2023

Sudan presidential palace blown up in military strike

The presidential palace at the centre of fierce fighting between Sudan's warring military leaders has been destroyed in an airstrike, according to the country's paramilitary unit. The Rapid...

Read more here: Sudan presidential palace blown up in military strike

____________________________

UPDATE 30 mins later: Here below is the full report including 2 photos currently on website of The Times. Note, there are no photos of the allegedly destroyed palace. One of the car photos appeared online earlier this week. 

Also, a Reuters report just in says "an army source denied the claim"- see the report by Reuters here:

https://www.msn.com/en-in/news/world/sudan-crisis-air-strikes-hit-khartoum-absence-of-police-prompts-looting-robbery/ar-AA1aYrDJ

____________________________

Sudan presidential palace blown up in military strike

Fred Harter, Port Sudan | Jane Flanagan

Tuesday May 09 2023, 9.30pm, The Times


The presidential palace at the centre of fierce fighting between Sudan’s warring military leaders has been destroyed in an airstrike, according to the country’s paramilitary unit.


The Rapid Support Forces have held the compound since April 15, when tensions between the country’s two most powerful figures exploded into warfare and turned the capital into a battleground.


In a statement last night the RSF said the colonial-era building — where the famed British Army officer Gordon of Khartoum was killed during the colonial era — had been devastated by missiles launched by air force fighter jets. They pledged “an appropriate response”.


Residents living near the sprawling complex, featured on stamps and bank notes, have been caught up in the clashes between forces loyal to General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, Sudan’s de-facto leader since a coup in 2019, and the RSF’s warlord leader General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.


The palace attack is expected to stall talks between their envoys, who are meeting in neighbouring Saudi Arabia to discuss a truce to allow humanitarian organisations to reach those in need.


Exact figures have been impossible to determine, but hundreds of people are believed to have been killed and thousands wounded since fighting broke out, with aid supplies disrupted and 115,000 refugees fleeing into neighbouring states.


Elradi Hamdan, 44, an architectural engineer from Edinburgh, told The Times that Foreign Office officials informed him he could only board an RAF plane in Port Sudan if he left behind his pregnant wife and five children, all of whom are Sudanese. “They said, ‘If you want to come alone there is no problem, but you cannot take anybody else, not even your children’,” Hamdan said. “They just took people with the British passport.”


British government flights out of the country for UK passport holders ended last week. Saudi Arabia and other countries, including the United States, are still evacuating people from Port Sudan’s dockside.


Hamdan’s wife is recovering from breast cancer and his children are traumatised after being caught up in the fighting in Khartoum. As Hamdan spoke to The Times, his 10-year-old son could be heard crying out in the background. “He’s talking about the war in his sleep,” Hamdan said. “He heard a lot of gunshots and saw a lot of things a kid his age shouldn’t see.”


The family are camping in a half-built call centre owned by a friend. Before arriving in Port Sudan, they travelled twice to the Wadi Seidna airstrip, another site where the RAF had been staging evacuation flights.


On the second trip, Hamdam said he watched “five or six flights come and go” as officials refused to take his family. He returned to his home to find it had been looted.


“I don’t know what to do,” he said. “As a British citizen, I can go anywhere if there is a ticket. But I cannot leave my wife and children behind.”

The presidential palace in Khartoum has been at the centre of the fight

RAPID SUPPORT FORCES/ESN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

A destroyed car near the presidential palace. People living near the compound have been caught up in fierce clashes between the warring factions 

GETTY IMAGES


View original: https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/sudan-presidential-palace-blown-up-in-military-strike-f3c23mgjq


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Sunday, April 30, 2023

UK: Evacuation flights have ended at Wadi Saeedna but our rescue efforts continue from Port Sudan

The RAF planes used until yesterday took off from Wadi Seidna Air Base, but tomorrow’s flight will leave from Port Sudan International Airport (Picture: Royal Navy)

Report from the METRO 

By Craig Munro

Sunday 30 April 2023 4:07 pm BST UK - full copy:


The UK is to run an additional flight to evacuate British citizens from Sudan after announcing an end to the operation yesterday.


Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said: ‘The UK has now airlifted over 2,100 people to safety from Sudan, in what has been the largest and longest evacuation of any western country. I want to thank all of those working to deliver this evacuation and ensure as many people as possible are brought to safety.


‘Evacuation flights have ended from Wadi Saeedna but our rescue efforts continue from Port Sudan.


‘We continue to do everything in our power to secure a long-term ceasefire, a stable transition to civilian rule and an end the violence in Sudan.’


View original: https://metro.co.uk/2023/04/30/uk-to-run-extra-sudan-evacuation-flight-as-rescue-efforts-continue-18698712/


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Friday, April 28, 2023

Sudan: British nationals have 24 hours to catch a flight

Report from Sky News

By Niamh Lynch

Sky News reporter @niamhielynch


Friday 28 April 2023 18:48, UK - excerpt:


Sudan: British nationals have 24 hours to catch an evacuation flight, says deputy PM


Oliver Dowden said more than 1,500 people had been flown out of Sudan on UK evacuation flights as he pushed back against claims he was abandoning British nationals.


British nationals in Sudan have 24 hours to catch a flight before they are stopped, the deputy prime minister has said.


The flights will end at 6pm UK time on Saturday, Oliver Dowden confirmed.


Speaking to reporters on Friday afternoon, he said more than 1,500 people had now been flown out of the country.


But he said there had been a "significant decline in British nationals coming forward", so the government would cease the flights. […]


Full story: https://news.sky.com/story/sudan-british-nationals-have-24-hours-to-catch-an-evacuation-flight-says-deputy-pm-12868600


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Sudan: Family stuck at Egypt border as drivers demand $40,000 to cross. Crossing on foot is banned

Report from BBC News

By Gabriela Pomeroy

Friday 28 April 2023 - excerpts:

Sudan crisis: Family stuck at Egypt border as drivers demand $40,000 to cross

In a statement to the BBC, the Foreign Office said it had been "working intensively to evacuate British Nationals, since the outbreak of violence in Sudan, in a complex and highly volatile environment".

"British Nationals in Sudan are our utmost priority and we urge those who wish to leave the country to travel to the British Evacuation Centre as soon as possible. We are unable to arrange any help with travel to the airfield," the statement added.


The Foreign Office said that by Thursday evening 897 people had been flown out of Wadi Saeedna airfield.


However the BBC has spoken to a British Sudanese doctor who is being evacuated by the RAF in the eastern Red Sea city of Port Sudan. There are dozens of British Sudanese citizens who are waiting to be evacuated from Port Sudan, but until now there have been no evacuation flights.


A family fleeing Sudan say they are among thousands stuck at the border with Egypt because drivers are demanding £31,810 ($40,000) to hire a bus to travel across.

Only people travelling on buses with special permits can cross the border.


Crossing on foot is banned.

Full story: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-65430334


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UK GOV: Sudan rescue flights 'to end in next 24 hours'

Report from the i 

By Hugo Gye Political Editor

Friday 28 April 2023 5:54 pm (Updated 8:50 pm) BST UK - excerpt:


Sudan evacuation flights to end on Saturday night as pressure grows to rescue all stranded UK residents


UK citizens wanting to be evacuated from Sudan have been told to travel to the airfield where flights are taking off as soon as possible


British evacuation flights from Sudan will end on Saturday as demand from UK citizens has slowed, ministers have warned – but they will not be opened up to residents of Britain who do not hold a passport.


Oliver Dowden, the Deputy Prime Minister, said that the UK military and civil servants had carried out “the longest and largest evacuation of any Western country”.


Some 1,573 British nationals have been lifted out of the country on 13 flights so far.


Any remaining passport holders wishing to be evacuated should travel to the Wadi Saeedna airstrip near Khartoum before 6pm BST on Saturday, Mr Dowden said.


He told broadcasters on Friday evening: “What we are saying now is that people should expect within the next 24 hours, so by six o’clock UK time tomorrow, for us to cease those flights… 


There remains another 24 hours for people to make their way to the airport to ensure that they can take advantage of this.”

UK nationals arriving in Cyprus after being flown from Sudan (Photo: MoD)


Full story: https://inews.co.uk/news/politics/sudan-evacuation-flights-end-saturday-pressure-rescue-stranded-uk-residents-2306681?ico=more_from_this_author


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Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Sudan crisis: UK troops set to take command at Khartoum airfield and can use force if necessary

Report from the i

By Hugo Gye, Political Editor

Tuesday 25 April 2023 6:49 pm (Updated 8:20 pm)


Sudan crisis: UK troops set to take command at Khartoum airfield and can use force if necessary


It remains unclear how many of the British citizens currently stranded in Sudan can be evacuated by the Government

British troops on their way to Sudan (Photo: LPHOT Mark Johnson/MoD)


British troops are poised to take control of the airfield in Sudan where evacuation flights have been taking British citizens out of the war-torn country.


Military and civilian officials will oversee operations at the facility outside Khartoum, including security in the event that the airfield comes under attack from local militias.


Three flights were due to be completed by Wednesday morning with several more expected throughout the day – but the UK Government does not know whether it will be able to evacuate all the British nationals who want to leave.


Officials are based at the Wadi Saeedna airfield but ministers have ruled out expanding operations beyond that area, meaning that only people who can make it there on their own will be eligible for evacuation


There are 120 British troops at the base including members of 40 Commando, who flew in from RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus.


i understands the UK troops will be ready to use force if required to protect the airfield, should it come under attack during the airlift.


Government officials are hopeful the operation can be carried out without any exchange of fire, with the troops primarily there to assist with logistics.


Defence Secretary Ben Wallace confirmed i‘s reporting on Tuesday evening, telling LBC Radio: “The Germans are leaving tomorrow, and we will take over the facilitation at the airfield.


“And the reason the Germans are leaving is people have stopped coming in large numbers.”


Mr Wallace said only one nation can facilitate the airfield at a time.


He added: “If the Spanish or the Italians or anyone else wants to fly, we’ll be the ones giving permissions effectively.”


The minister also said 99 per cent of the British nationals who have registered with the Foreign Office are in the capital Khartoum.


The Government is still working on other options including an evacuation by boat from the coastal city of Port Sudan.


The start of the mission came after the announcement of a ceasefire between the two warring forces currently tearing Sudan apart. 


It also followed an agreement between the UK Government and the armed forces of Sudan to give British nationals safe passage out of the country.


The Foreign Office has made contact with the Rapid Support Forces, which is fighting the Sudanese Armed Forces of the internationally recognised government.


A processing centre at the airfield is being run by staff from the Foreign Office and Border Force after the entire embassy team was evacuated on Sunday over fears they would be directly targeted by militias. The site, used by several different Western governments, was being operated and guarded by the German military but as of Wednesday evening they were preparing to end their mission and hand over to the UK.


There are no plans to help British nationals to access the evacuation mission because of the dangers of travelling even short distances within Sudan. And if the current ceasefire breaks down, there is no guarantee the evacuation efforts can continue, Government sources have said.


Rishi Sunak rejected the suggestion that the Government was too slow to act to help British citizens, saying: “I’m pleased that we were actually one of the first countries to safely evacuate our diplomats and our families. And it was right that we prioritised them because they were being targeted.


“The security situation on the ground in Sudan is complicated, it is volatile and we wanted to make sure we could put in place processes that are going to work for people, that are going to be safe and effective.”


The UK’s military presence in the region may enable the Government to bring humanitarian aid to Sudan once the evacuation mission is complete, Defence Secretary Ben Wallace told MPs. He said: “It could well be that it stops becoming an evacuation and in fact it becomes a humanitarian crisis that we have to deal with, that is the challenge on the ground in Sudan is the food and water access as a result of the conflict.”


Oliver Dowden, the new Deputy Prime Minister, chaired the latest in a near-daily series of Cobra meetings to co-ordinate the response of multiple different Whitehall departments to the crisis.


View original: here.

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

UK Gov: Get to airfield for evacuation, Britons told


From BBC News Live posted today 14:52 BST - full copy:

Get to airfield for evacuation, UK nationals told

We're hearing a bit more from the UK Foreign Office, which is now urging British passport holders and their families to head directly to an airfield north of Khartoum.
  • This is a change to the previous advice which told British nationals not to head to the airfield until they were contacted.

    The updated advisory says flights will leave from Wadi Saeedna airfield.

    It shares the GPS coordinates: 15° 48 10 N, 32° 29 32 E

    And the WhatThreeWords for the geolocation app are: refusals.atom.herds

    In a tweet, the government advises people to "travel to the location as soon as possible to be processed for the flight".

View original, with thanks to the BBC: here. 

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