San Antonio Express-News

Sudanese fear all-out battle, frantic to flee

- By Jack Jeffery and Noha Elhennawy

KHARTOUM, Sudan — As foreign government­s airlifted hundreds of their diplomats and other citizens to safety, Sudanese on Monday desperatel­y sought ways to escape the chaos, fearing that the country’s two rival generals will escalate their all-out battle for power once evacuation­s are completed.

In dramatic evacuation operations, convoys of foreign diplomats, civilian teachers, students, workers and families from dozens of countries wound past combatants at tense front lines in the capital of Khartoum to reach extraction points. Others drove hundreds of miles to the country’s east coast. A stream of European, Mideast, African and Asian military aircraft flew in all day Sunday and Monday to ferry them out.

But for many Sudanese, the airlift was a terrifying sign that internatio­nal powers, after failing repeatedly to broker ceasefires, only expect a worsening of the fighting that has already pushed the population into disaster.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he had helped broker a 72-hour cease-fire to begin late Monday. It would extend a nominal truce coinciding with a Muslim holiday that brought almost no reduction in fighting but helped to facilitate the evacuation­s.

U.N. Secretary-general Antonio Guterres warned of a “catastroph­ic conflagrat­ion” that could engulf the whole region. He urged the 15 members of the Security Council to “exert maximum leverage” on both sides in order to “pull Sudan back from the edge of the abyss.”

Sudanese face a harrowing search for safety in the constantly shifting battle of explosions, gunfire and armed fighters looting shops and homes. Many have been huddling in their homes for nine days. Food and fuel are leaping in price and harder to find, electricit­y and internet are cut off in much of the country, and hospitals are near collapse.

Those who can afford it were making the 15-hour-long drive to the Egyptian border or to Port Sudan on the Red Sea coast. Those without means to get abroad streamed out to relatively calmer provinces along the Nile north and south of Khartoum. Many more were trapped, with cash in short supply and transport costs spiraling.

“Traveling out of Khartoum has become a luxury,” said Shahin al-sherif, a high school teacher. The 27-year-old al-sherif was franticall­y trying to arrange transport out of Khartoum for himself, his younger sister, mother, aunt and grandmothe­r. They had been trapped for days in their home in Khartoum’s Amarat neighborho­od while fighting raged outside. Finally, they moved to a safer district farther out.

But al-sherif expects things to get worse and worries his sister, aunt and grandmothe­r, all diabetic, won’t be able to get the supplies they need. Bus ticket prices have more than quadrupled so that renting a bus for 50 people to get to the Egyptian border costs around $14,000, he said.

Heavy gunfire and thundering explosions rocked the city in continued fighting between the military and a rival paramilita­ry group called the Rapid Support Forces. In the afternoon, intensifie­d airstrikes hammered Khartoum’s Nile-side Kalakla district for an hour until the area was “razed to the ground,” said Atiya Abdulla Atiya, secretary of the Doctors’ Syndicate. The bombardmen­t sent dozens of wounded to the Turkish Hospital, one of the few medical facilities still functionin­g, he said.

Egypt meanwhile denied that any of its diplomats had been harmed after the Sudanese military claimed that an assistant to the Egyptian military attache was killed in an attack. Cairo, which has close ties to the Sudanese army, has joined calls for a cease-fire.

Over 420 people, including at least 273 civilians, have been killed and over 3,700 wounded since the fighting began April 15. The military has appeared to have the upper hand in fighting in Khartoum but the RSF still controls many districts in the capital and the neighborin­g city of Omdurman, and has several large stronghold­s around the country. With the military vowing to fight until the RSF is crushed, many fear a dramatic escalation.

For foreign nationals, the need to abandon Khartoum had become overwhelmi­ng by the seventh day of the conflict. Khartoum’s wealthy neighborho­ods, where most foreigners live, saw some of the heaviest shelling and drone strikes, and several fell under RSF control.

The United States said Monday that it has begun facilitati­ng the departure of private U.S. citizens after swooping in to extract diplomats on Sunday. White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the U.S. has placed intelligen­ce and reconnaiss­ance assets over the evacuation route from Khartoum to Port Sudan but does not have any U.S. troops on the ground.

 ?? Khalil Mazraawi//tribune News Service ?? Evacuees from Sudan arrive at a military airport in Amman, Jordan, on Monday. A stream of military aircraft flew into Sudan all day Sunday and Monday to take foreigners out.
Khalil Mazraawi//tribune News Service Evacuees from Sudan arrive at a military airport in Amman, Jordan, on Monday. A stream of military aircraft flew into Sudan all day Sunday and Monday to take foreigners out.

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