Boston Sunday Globe

US evacuates embassay staff, families in Sudan

Sources say UK, France, others also plan to leave

- By Claire Parker, Katharine Houreld, and Ellen Francis

The United States completed the evacuation of US Embassy personnel and their families from Sudan, people familiar with the matter said late Saturday.

The operation was carried out Sunday morning local time, as fighting between rival forces there entered a second week, raising fears of a wider conflict in the Horn of Africa. The Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a Sudanese paramilita­ry group battling Sudan’s army, issued a statement saying it coordinate­d with Washington on the evacuation.

Earlier Saturday, the Sudanese military said that countries such as the United States, Britain, France, and China would soon evacuate their diplomatic staff “within the coming hours.”

In a statement, the Sudanese Armed Forces said that its leader, General Abdel Fattah alBurhan, had agreed to facilitate and secure the evacuation of foreign nationals from the capital, Khartoum, after requests from multiple countries. The army said those nations, including the United States, would use their own military aircraft to evacuate citizens and diplomatic staffers, even as the main airport in Khartoum remained closed.

In recent days, the United States, Canada, South Korea, Japan, and the Netherland­s all said that they sent planes and troops to Sudan’s neighbors to prepare for emergency evacuation­s.

The US Embassy in Khartoum said earlier Saturday that it remained under a shelter-inplace order because of “ongoing fighting, gunfire, and security forces activity” in the city and surroundin­g areas. Some 16,000 US citizens are in Sudan, according to a US official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive informatio­n.

“It is not currently safe to undertake a US government-coordinate­d evacuation of private US citizens,” the embassy said on Twitter.

China’s embassy said in a statement that it was still gathering informatio­n on how many Chinese nationals in Sudan wished to evacuate. A stateowned newspaper in China cited embassy staff as saying it was “fake news” that the government would begin withdrawin­g personnel on Saturday.

“Please stay faithful that the motherland will never forget any overseas compatriot­s and that the embassy will always stand firmly behind everyone,” the embassy said in an earlier notice posted Friday.

The conflictin­g reports underscore­d the chaos that has engulfed Sudan since fighting broke out between the army and the RSF earlier this month. Burhan, who leads the armed forces, has been locked in a power struggle with the RSF’s top commander, Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.

Together, the two generals seized control of Sudan in a coup in 2021, toppling a short-lived civilian government. In December, they signed a framework deal to transition the country back to civilian rule — but disagreed over key elements, including how to reintegrat­e the RSF, which grew out of the Janjaweed militias in Darfur, into the armed forces.

The two sides began fighting in Khartoum and other cities on April 15, just days after the deadline to form a civilian government passed.

At least 400 people have been killed, according to the Sudanese health ministry, with thousands more injured and refugees now streaming into Chad from the Darfur region in western Sudan.

The violence also has closed hospitals and airports, preventing evacuation­s.

The RSF said in a statement late Friday that it was willing to open airports to allow countries to evacuate their nationals — but it is unclear how many airports the RSF controls.

Burhan said his forces controlled all of Sudan’s airports except for one in Khartoum and another in the southweste­rn city of Nyala.

“Living conditions are deteriorat­ing, and we share the internatio­nal community’s concern about foreign nationals,” he said in an interview Saturday with the Saudi television station AlHadath.

Still, some foreign government­s said they had successful­ly evacuated citizens or were preparing to do so.

Nineteen Italians aboard a cruise ship in the waters of Port Sudan were taken safely to the Egyptian city of Hurghada on the Red Sea, Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said Saturday on Twitter.

Jordan’s Foreign Ministry spokesman, Sinan al-Majali, also said on television that his government began evacuating at least 300 Jordanian citizens in coordinati­on with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Saudi Arabia’s naval forces evacuated 91 citizens and more than 60 foreign nationals from countries including Kuwait, Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Bangladesh, India, and Canada, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement Saturday.

The evacuation­s fell during celebratio­ns for the Muslim holiday Eid al-Fitr, marking the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. The warring factions said they had agreed to a temporary cease-fire for the holiday.

Previous efforts to achieve temporary cease-fires have failed, and for days, gunfire and shelling have trapped residents at home as their supplies dwindle.

A Sudanese science teacher in Khartoum said that fighting continued in the capital and that the residents who remained were angry about reports that there was a cease-fire.

“Anything we hear in the news is a lie,” he said, speaking on the condition of anonymity for security reasons. “The fire is getting stronger. We can’t stay here. If you do not die from the bombs, you will die of hunger. There is nothing in the markets to eat.”

Human rights monitor Ahmed Gouja, based in Nyala, Darfur, described the atmosphere there as “calm,” with markets “partially functionin­g” on Saturday. But he said “grave violations” had been committed by the Sudanese army’s soldiers in Nyala, including beatings, arrests and harassment of residents on the basis of skin color.

 ?? MARWAN ALI/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Smoke was seen in Khartoum, Sudan, Saturday. The fighting there resumed after an internatio­nally brokered cease-fire failed.
MARWAN ALI/ASSOCIATED PRESS Smoke was seen in Khartoum, Sudan, Saturday. The fighting there resumed after an internatio­nally brokered cease-fire failed.

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