Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Ex Sudanese president Bashir and 30 allies out of jail before Sudan's leaders started fighting 15 April 2023

Report from Reuters via The New Daily.com Australia

By Khalid Abdelaziz and Nadine AwadallaReuters


Dated Wednesday 26 April 2023 - full copy:


Former president Omar al-Bashir and allies out of jail as Sudan fighting flares


Play Aljazeera Video - SUDAN TRAVEL EXPLOITATION? 

Sudanese civilians priced out of leaving conflict 


As foreign nationals are evacuated out of Sudan by their embassies, many Sudanese are being priced out of a journey.


Sudan’s capital has resounded with gunfire and explosions, eroding a truce amid collapsing basic services, dwindling food supplies and the opening of a prison that let out allies of a jailed former autocrat.


With the conflict between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) showing no sign of easing, the army said former president Omar al-Bashir had been transferred to a military hospital before hostilities started on April 15.


It said Bashir was moved from prison with 30 former members of his regime, including Abdel Rahim Mohamed Hussein, who along with the former president is wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes for atrocities during an earlier conflict in the Darfur region.


The whereabouts of Bashir came into question after a former minister in his government, Ali Haroun, announced on Tuesday he had left Kober prison in Khartoum with other former officials.


Haroun is also wanted by the ICC on dozens of war crimes charges.


Thousands of convicted criminals, including some sentenced to death, were held in the vast prison, along with senior and lower-ranking officials from the Bashir regime, which was toppled four years ago.


Play France24 Video - Sudan fighting: Clashes between army and RSF underway despite truce. 


The US-brokered ceasefire in Sudan is now in its second day.  


But reports of new air strikes show just how fragile that truce between two warring generals really is. 


Civilian life has come to a standstill in Sudan. 


The country's residents are now facing major shortages of food, water, fuel 

and electricity. 


Sudan was already heavily dependent on humanitarian aid before the violence began nearly two weeks ago. 


But the situation has now been plunged into chaos. 


FRANCE 24's regional correspondent Bastien Renouil has the latest from Djibouti.


Sudanese authorities and the RSF traded accusations over the release of inmates, with the police saying paramilitary gunmen had stormed into five prisons at the weekend, killing several guards and opening the gates.


The RSF blamed authorities for letting Haroun and others out.


The release of convicted criminals added to a growing sense of lawlessness in Khartoum, where residents have reported worsening insecurity, with widespread looting and gangs roaming the streets.


“This war, which is ignited by the ousted regime, will lead the country to collapse,” said Sudan’s Forces of Freedom and Change, a political grouping leading an internationally backed plan to transfer to civilian rule derailed by the eruption of fighting.


Bashir came to power in a 1989 military coup and was ousted in a popular uprising in 2019.


Two years later, the army led by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, with support from the RSF, took over in a coup.


The present conflict between the army and RSF leader General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo broke out in part over disagreements about how quickly to integrate the RSF into the army under the planned transition to civilian rule.


The ICC in The Hague has accused Bashir of genocide, and Haroun of organising militias to attack civilians in Darfur in 2003 and 2004.


The ICC declined to comment on Bashir, Haroun and Hussein’s prison transfers.


Play Video - WHO Warns of 'Biological Hazard' After Sudan Fighters Take Control of Laboratory 


On April 25, the World Health Organization (WHO) warned of a "high risk of biological hazard" after a central public laboratory was seized in war-torn Sudan.


The renewed battles were in Omdurman, one of Khartoum’s twin cities, where the army was fighting reinforcements to the RSF brought in from other regions of Sudan, a Reuters reporter said.


The army has accused the RSF of using a three-day truce to reinforce itself with men and weapons.


The truce was due to end on Thursday evening.


Thanks to the ceasefire, fighting between army soldiers the RSF was more subdued in the centre of Khartoum.


The fighting has turned residential areas into battlefields.


Air strikes and artillery have killed at least 459 people, wounded more than 4000, destroyed hospitals and limited food distribution in a nation where a third of its 46 million people rely on humanitarian aid.


United Nations special envoy on Sudan Volker Perthes told the UN Security Council on Tuesday the ceasefire “seems to be holding in some parts so far”.


But he said neither party showed readiness to “seriously negotiate, suggesting that both think that securing a military victory over the other is possible”.


Foreign powers have evacuated thousands of diplomats and private citizens in recent days, including 1674 from 54 countries helped out by Saudi Arabia.


Sudanese along with citizens of neighbouring countries have also been leaving en masse.


More than 10,000 people crossed into Egypt from Sudan in the past five days, authorities in Cairo said, adding to an estimated 20,000 who have entered Chad.


Others have fled to South Sudan and Ethiopia, despite difficult conditions there.


-Reuters


View original: https://thenewdaily.com.au/news/2023/04/26/omar-al-bashir-out-of-jail-sudan/


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Sudan army launches manhunt for escaped prisoners

Report from BBC News LIVE Reporting

By Wycliffe Muia, BBC News

Wednesday 26 April 2023 12:27 BST UK - full copy:


Sudan army launches manhunt for escaped prisoners


Sudan's army and the police say they have launched an operation to bring back prisoners who have escaped during the fighting between rival military factions, including war crimes suspect Ahmed Haroun.


The interior ministry said in a statement that the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which is battling the army, broke into five prisons and released an unknown number of inmates.


The ministry said the raid on Kober Prison in the capital Khartoum led to the killing of two prison warders, and that the RSF released all inmates.


The jailbreaks took place between 21-24 April, according to the ministry.


A Sudanese army spokesman told Sky News Arabia this was a "major security threat".


The spokesman said the army was coordinating with the police to return inmates to prisons. He denied army involvement in the jailbreaks, saying the military "does not have any supervision over prisons".


View original here.


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Sudan: What is the significance of Haroun's prison escape?

Report from BBC News LIVE Reporting

By JAMES COPNALL

BBC World Service


Wednesday 26 April 2023 10:45 BST UK - full copy:


What is the significance of Haroun's prison escape?


As we’ve reported Ahmed Haroun has escaped from prison.


He played a key part in the Sudanese government’s brutal response to two long-running and still unresolved civil wars, in Darfur and South Kordofan.


He was indicted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for his alleged role in the atrocities in Darfur, which has been described as the first genocide of the 21st century.


Haroun was a member of former President Omar al Bashir’s inner circle for much of his 30 years in power - and was locked up once Bashir was overthrown in 2019.


Now Haroun says he and other Bashir loyalists are out of Kober prison.


Plenty of Sudanese people will believe this is just the latest example of Gen Burhan trying to restore Bashir’s Islamist lieutenants to the forefront of Sudanese politics.


View original here,


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Former president al-Bashir moved to hospital before fighting began, says Sudanese army

Report from BBC News LIVE Reporting

Wednesday 26 April 2023 10:19 BST UK - full copy:


Former president al-Bashir moved to hospital before fighting began, says military


Former Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir was moved from prison to a military hospital before the outbreak of fighting earlier this month, according to the Sudanese army.


Bashir came to power in a military coup in 1989 and ruled Sudan until 2019, when he was toppled by another coup after large-scale protests.


Following his ousting, he was convicted of corruption and sentenced to two years in prison.


The army said in a statement that Bashir and a number of others had been moved from the Kober prison, near capital Khartoum, to a military hospital under police custody on the recommendation of medical staff.


Questions were raised about Bashir's whereabouts after a former minister in his government, Ali Haroun, announced on Tuesday that the former president had left the prison with other former officials.


Some reports had suggested that Bashir may have been released during an attack on the prison.


Both Bashir and Haroun are wanted by the International Criminal Court over alleged atrocities in the western Sudanese region of Darfur.


Read the BBC's profile of Bashir here.


View original here,


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Whereabouts of former Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir unclear amid mass prison breaks

Report from BBC News LIVE Reporting

By BBC Monitoring


Dated Wednesday 26 April 2023 8:37 BST UK - full copy:


Whereabouts of former President Bashir unclear amid mass prison breaks


Detained ex-officials from the regime of ousted President Omar al-Bashir have reportedly fled from Kober Prison in Khartoum, which has been the epicentre of Sudan's power struggle.


It is unclear if Bashir - who was jailed for corruption during his 30-year tenure - is among the escapees.


However, Al Jazeera on Tuesday cited family members saying he was still receiving treatment at a military hospital in the Sudanese capital.


And an official from the former governing National Congress Party (NCP) who fled from the prison told the Al-Sudani newspaper that they will "surrender to the judicial authorities when the situation allows".


"We made a decision to protect ourselves due to lack of security, water, food and treatment, as well as the death of many prisoners in Kober [prison]," Ahmed Haroun said.


Haroun is wanted for alleged war crimes, which he has previously denied. They relate to the alleged incitement of violence against civilians in Darfur. He was arrested in 2019 following the coup against Bashir.


Prisons have reportedly been targeted as fighting between the rival military factions rage for a second week.


In South Darfur's capital of Nyala, at least 750 prisoners reportedly escaped following protests and riots by inmates, while hundreds of others have escaped from other prisons in Khartoum and Omdurman.


View original here.


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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.

U.S. Navy Sea Base to reposition off Sudan

NOTE from Sudan Watch Editor: Wow. The Americans have not just one of these humongous floating islands but three! Who knew such vessels existed. Info within this report says the ship is self propelled.

Report from The War Zone

By Joseph Trevithick


Tuesday 25 April 2023, 1:51 AM GMT+1


U.S. Navy Sea Base To Reposition Off Sudan For Evacuation Contingency

The U.S. Navy's Expeditionary Sea Base ship USS Lewis B. Puller is on its way to take up a position off the coast of Sudan where it could support evacuation efforts if required. The ship's unique abilities to support these kinds of operations are among the exact reasons why the Navy began working to acquire vessels of this type more than a decade ago.

Pentagon spokesperson Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder announced that Puller was headed for Sudan earlier today at a routine press conference. The Navy had already deployed the Arleigh Burke class destroyer USS Truxtun to the area, where it is also on call, if necessary. The deployment of Puller follows a U.S. military operation this weekend to help American diplomats and their dependents evacuate Sudan's capital Khartoum. [...]

The Navy currently has three Expeditionary Sea Bases (ESB) in service, including Puller, which was commissioned in 2017, and is in the process of acquiring three more, Full story here.

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Sudan humanitarian situation extremely dire

Report from Radio Dabanga

By Radio Dabanga


Tuesday 25 April 2023


Sudan humanitarian situation extremely dire


View full report here.

Photo: KHARTOUM, Associated Press / Sky News.com Tue 25 Apr 2023

RSF child soldiers with AK-47s roam Khartoum Sudan

Report from Sky News UK


Tuesday 25 April 2023 13:57 BST - excerpt:


'A 14-year-old with an AK-47 is a very dangerous individual'


Defence and security analyst Professor Michael Clarke has said there are reports of child soldiers on the streets as part of the Rapid Support Force rebels, providing an insight into just how dangerous the situation on the ground in Sudan is for civilians.


"A 13 or 14-year-old with an AK47 who thinks he's a big shot is a very dangerous individual. 


"So just getting a family to the airfield, or anywhere, in this situation is very dangerous," he said.


View original, with thanks to Sky: here.

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

VIDEO: Devastation on streets of Khartoum. Gunfire in Port Sudan Prison. RSF blamed for storming prisons

Report and video from Sky News UK

Timestamped 12:24 BST Tuesday 25 April 2023 


Devastation on the streets of Khartoum


The streets of the Sudanese capital have been left looking like something out of a disaster movie by the intense fighting.


Desolate roads littered with rubble are flanked by scorched, windowless buildings.


People wandering the streets were seen carrying supplies either by hand or some in wheelbarrows.


View original and video here.

Getty Images Copyright: Getty Images
Image caption: Buildings across Khartoum are pockmarked from more than a week of heavy fighting


There are also reports of gunfire inside Port Sudan prison. An army spokesman told Sky News Arabia that the RSF was responsible for "storming prisons". Source: BBC News Live Reporting.

French special forces soldier shot on Sudan rescue

Sadly, a French special forces soldier has been seriously injured after being shot while helping French government officials escape from Khartoum, according to Britain’s Africa minister Andrew Mitchell.


Here is a report from The Telegraph


Tuesday 25 April 2023 9:13am BST - excerpt:


French special forces soldier shot on Sudan rescue mission


A French special forces soldier is "gravely ill" after a French team was shot at out outside the embassy as they evacuated diplomats, a British minister has revealed. 


"When the French were seeking to evacuate their diplomats, and some people from the wider French government platform... they were shot at as they came out through the embassy gateway and I understand one of their special forces is gravely ill," Andrew Mitchell, Africa minister for the UK Foreign Office, said in parliament on Monday.


It came as British troops flew to Port Sudan to carry out a reconnaissance mission as the Government continues efforts to rescue stranded citizens.  

Source: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2023/04/24/sudan-latest-news-uk-diplomats-evacuation/

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Saudi Arabia sends Egypt condolences over the death of embassy staff member in Khartoum, Sudan

Report from Alarabiya News.net

By Ghinwa Obeid, Al Arabiya English


Published: 25 April ,2023: 03:22 PM GST

Updated: 25 April ,2023: 04:02 PM GST - excerpt:


Saudi Arabia sends Egypt its condolences over death of embassy staff


Saudi Arabia’s foreign ministry offered Egypt its condolences over the death of an embassy staff member in Sudan.

The Egyptian foreign ministry announced in a statement that its assistant administrative attache at the embassy in Khartoum Mohammed al-Gharrawi was killed on Monday.

Al-Gharrawi, the statement said, was killed as he was “heading from his home to the embassy in order to follow up on the evacuation process of Egyptian nationals in Sudan.”

The ministry mourned al-Gharrawi as a “martyr” and a “symbol of sacrifice” for the sake of Egypt, adding that the mission in Sudan will continue to carry out its responsibilities in the evacuation process.

Saudi Arabia expressed its “sincere condolences and sympathy” to Egypt over the incident, the ministry said in a statement early Tuesday.

Passengers take out luggage as they disembark off a vehicle at a rest-point by a desert road at al-Gabolab in Sudan's Northern State, about 100 kilometres northwest of the capital, on April 25, 2023. (AFP)


View original: https://english.alarabiya.net/News/middle-east/2023/04/25/Saudi-Arabia-sends-Egypt-its-condolences-over-death-of-embassy-staff


Rest In Peace +  + +


PM Kishida: Japan evacuated 45 nationals and their spouses from Sudan, and temporarily closed embassy

Here is more detail on Japan’s evacuations so far.

Japan has evacuated 45 nationals and their spouses from Sudan, and temporarily closed its embassy, prime minister Fumio Kishida and officials said Tuesday.

“A total of 45 people took off from eastern Sudan for Djibouti in the C2 transport aircraft dispatched” by Japanese troops, Kishida told reporters in the early hours of Tuesday.

Members of Japan's Air self-defence Force board a C-130 transport plane leaving for Djibouti to prepare the evacuation of Japanese citizens from Sudan, at Komaki airbase in Japan, 21 April 2023.
 Photograph: Jiji Press/EPA

He said four other Japanese had also been able to move from Sudan to Djibouti and Ethiopia with help from France and international organisations.

A few hours later, Japan’s foreign minister said in a statement that the embassy was now temporarily closed after staff were evacuated.

Japan had said it had roughly 60 citizens in Sudan when it decided to evacuate them.

The foreign ministry will set up a liaison office in Djibouti to continue helping remaining Japanese in Sudan to evacuate, it said.

View the original, with thanks to the Guardian, here.

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Indian navy ship sails into Port Sudan

Copyright: @MEAIndia / Twitter / India's Ministry of External Affairs


From BBC News Live Reporting 16:52 BST UK - copy in full and image:


Indian navy ship sails into Port Sudan


A spokesman for India's Ministry of External Affairs has tweeted that a naval ship has arrived at Port Sudan to support the evacuation of the country's stranded citizens.


Arindam Bagchi also shared several images showing the military vessel called the INS Teg on his official Twitter account and said the ship had also been loaded with "essential relief supplies" for Indian nationals.

View original here.


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Sudan: UK seaborne evacuation being considered

Report from BBC News LIVE Reporting 


Tuesday 25 Apr 2023 15:44 BST UK


Seaborne evacuation being considered - UK defence secretary

UK Defence Secretary Ben Wallace [pictured] says the Royal Marines are scoping out a possible seaborne evacuation from Port Sudan, some 500 miles (800km) away from the intense fighting in the capital, Khartoum. It is a more benign environment, it is an access into the Red Sea and to commercial airports in places like Jeddah (in Saudi Arabia) and gives us space and time in order to process many people there," he said.

He said Royal Marines were already in Port Sudan to "establish the safety of the area and any options" so "we are in a good position there should we wish to increase support". 


View the original, with thanks to BBC,  here.


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UK evacuation mission under way in Khartoum Sudan. RAF flight lands in Cyprus, with more to come

From BBC News Live Reporting

Tue 25 Apr 2023 14:21 BST UK - full copy:

As we've been telling you, the UK government has launched an evacuation plan for British nationals in Sudan.

Some 2,000 British citizens in Sudan are registered with the Foreign Office to be evacuated.


In the pictures below we can see preparations being made in the RAF base in Cyprus ahead of the mission.


One RAF flight which took off from Khartoum earlier has landed back in Cyprus, though at the moment we don't have any information on who is on that flight.

Copyright: ROYAL NAVY/MARK JOHNSON HANDOUT/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock


Image caption: The mission to evacuate civilians from Sudan has begun in Cyprus

Copyright: ROYAL NAVY/MARK JOHNSON HANDOUT/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock


Image caption: About 1,400 military personnel are involved in the rescue effort. View original here.


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_________________________________________________________


BBC News Live Reporting posted at 13:43 - full copy:


RAF flight lands in Cyprus, with more to come


We can now confirm that an RAF flight which took off from Khartoum earlier has landed in Cyprus. 


We are expecting another landing later this afternoon. At this stage, we don't have any details on who is on these flights.


This is obviously a high-risk and delicate operation, and the Ministry of Defence is not releasing a huge amount of information as it unfolds. View original here.


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_________________________________________________________


BBC Live report by Caroline Hawley Posted at 17:51 BST


First UK flight to land in Cyprus at 18:30 


I've been told that the first evacuation flight will arrive in Larnaca at 18:30 BST - with two more coming in overnight.

Around 250 people are expected to be on board those three flights, and they're due to be flown back to the UK from Cyprus on charter planes. 

Those flights, I've been told, have yet to be arranged. View original here.

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_________________________________________________________

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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