Stabroek News

Sudan fighting resurges as UN envoy says ceasefire partly holding

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(Reuters) - Fighting flared anew in Sudan late yesterday despite a ceasefire declaratio­n by the warring factions, as a U.N. envoy said the truce was partially holding even though there was no sign that the two sides were ready for serious talks.

The Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) and paramilita­ry Rapid Support Forces (RSF) agreed to a 72-hour ceasefire beginning on Tuesday after negotiatio­ns mediated by the U.S. and Saudi Arabia.

But gunfire and explosions could be heard after nightfall in Omdurman, one of Khartoum’s sister cities on the Nile River where the army used drones to target RSF positions, a Reuters reporter said.

The army also used drones to try to drive fighters back from a fuel refinery in Bahri, the third city at the confluence of the Blue Nile and White Nile.

U.N. special envoy on Sudan Volker Perthes told the U.N. Security Council on

Tuesday that the ceasefire “seems to be holding in some parts so far.”

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

“This is a miscalcula­tion,” Perthes said, adding that Khartoum’s airport was operationa­l but the tarmac damaged.

Since Sudan erupted in warfare between the army and the RSF on April 15, derailing a transition to civilian democracy, the paramilita­ries have embedded themselves in residentia­l districts and the army has sought to target them from the air.

The fighting has turned residentia­l areas into battlefiel­ds. Air strikes and artillery have killed at least 459 people, wounded over 4,000, destroyed hospitals and limited food distributi­on in a nation where a third of its 46 million people rely on food aid.

A projectile hit Al-Roumi medical centre in Omdurman on Tuesday and exploded inside the facility, injuring 13 people, a hospital official said.

In a further sign of deteriorat­ing security, former Sudanese Minister Ahmed Haroun, who is wanted by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur, said he and other officials were allowed to leave Kober prison.

Following reports of a prison break in recent days, Haroun said that conditions at Kober had deteriorat­ed badly. A protester imprisoned there said in a taped statement posted online on Sunday that prisoners had been let go after a week with no water or food.

Haroun and the other released officials served under ex-President Omar al-Bashir who came to power in a 1989 military coup and was ousted in a popular uprising in 2019. The ICC in the Hague has accused Haroun of organising militias to attack civilians in a genocide in Darfur in 2003 and 2004. The whereabout­s of Bashir were not immediatel­y clear.

Separately, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) said one of the warring parties took control of a national health facility in Khartoum and expressed concern about potential biological hazards from measles and cholera pathogens for vaccinatio­ns stored there.

An exodus of embassies and aid workers from Africa’s third-largest country has raised fears that civilians who remain will be in greater danger if the shaky three-day truce deal, which expires on Thursday, does not hold.

U.S. President Joe Biden’s national security team is continuing to talk to Sudan’s rival military leaders to end fighting and provide humanitari­an aid, a White House spokespers­on said on Tuesday.

The fighting has paralysed hospitals and other essential services, and left many people stranded in their homes with dwindling supplies of food and water.

With bodies scattered in the streets, internatio­nal aid group Medecins sans Frontieres (MSF) said it had been unable to get fresh supplies or personnel into Sudan.

The U.N. humanitari­an office (OCHA) said shortages of food, water, medicines and fuel were becoming “extremely acute”, prices were surging and it had cut back operations for safety reasons.

The U.N. refugee agency forecast that hundreds of thousands of people might flee into neighbouri­ng countries.

As foreign government­s evacuated their nationals, those with nowhere to go said they felt forsaken.

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