Gulf News

Sudanese still await relief on day two of tense ceasefire

ARTILLERY FIRE ECHOES ACROSS KHARTOUM AMID FEAR OF TRUCE VIOLATION

- KHARTOUM

Fighting had eased but not stopped in Sudan yesterday, the second full day of a US and Saudi-brokered ceasefire that has raised cautious hopes among its beleaguere­d civilians that aid corridors and escape routes will open soon.

Sporadic artillery fire has still echoed across the capital but the two foreign powers observing the one-week truce said that “fighting in Khartoum appeared to be less intense” since it entered into force late Monday.

Washington and Riyadh voiced “concern” however that the warring sides had sought to gain military advantage in the lead-up to the truce and pointed to reports “indicating that both sides violated the agreement”.

Nonetheles­s, they stressed that preparatio­ns were underway “to deliver lifesaving assistance” to the people of Sudan, who have endured more than five weeks of fighting that has claimed more than 1,000 lives.

The war broke out on April 15, sparking frantic mass evacuation­s of thousands of foreigners and forcing more than a million Sudanese to flee their homes internally and across borders.

The fighting pits Sudan’s de facto leader, the army chief Abdel Fattah Al Burhan, against his former deputy, Mohammad Hamdan Daglo, nicknamed “Hemeti”, who commands the paramilita­ry Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

The chaos has left millions hunkering down in their homes to hide from the combatants and roaming looters amid intense summer heat, power blackouts and desperate shortages of food, medicines and other staples.

After the looting of one of our medical warehouses in Khartoum, fridges were unplugged and medicines removed. The entire cold chain was ruined so the medicines are spoiled and can’t be used to treat anyone.”

Jean-Nicolas Armstrong Dangelser | Doctors Without Borders

Medical aid workers voiced alarm about dire shortages as fighting has left most hospitals destroyed, ransacked and even used as fire bases.

“The whole country has been taken hostage”, said the UN’s expert on human rights in Sudan, Radhouane Nouicer. “People feel alone and abandoned.”

‘Trajectory of collapse’

Hopes for quick relief from the fighting and suffering were dimmed by the fact that a series of earlier ceasefires were all quickly broken, with both sides trading blame for the violations.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has warned that “if the ceasefire is violated, we’ll know” and pledged to “hold violators accountabl­e through our sanctions and other tools at our disposal”.

Sudan expert Alex de Waal warned that the “trajectory of state collapse” is now threatenin­g “to turn Sudan as a whole, including Khartoum, into something that resembles the Darfur of 10-15 years ago”.

Medical aid workers meanwhile voiced alarm about dire shortages as fighting has left most hospitals destroyed, ransacked and even used as fire bases, particular­ly in Khartoum and Darfur.

“After the looting of one of our medical warehouses in Khartoum, fridges were unplugged and medicines removed,” said Jean-Nicolas Armstrong Dangelser of aid group Doctors Without Borders. “The entire cold chain was ruined so the medicines are spoiled and can’t be used to treat anyone.”

 ?? AFP ?? A man walks past a burnt out bank branch in southern Khartoum yesterday. ■
AFP A man walks past a burnt out bank branch in southern Khartoum yesterday. ■

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