Gunmen loot UN food aid warehouse in Darfur

Gunmen have looted a World Food Programme (WFP) warehouse containing some 1,900 tons of food aid in Darfur amid a surge of violence in the troubled western region, officials said Wednesday.

Residents of El-Fasher, capital of North Darfur state, reported heavy shooting near the warehouse late Tuesday. “We heard intense gunfire,” Mohamed Salem told AFP.

A WFP official said they were “conducting an audit into what was stolen from the warehouse, which contains some 1,900 tons of food products.”

Darfur has seen a spike in conflict since October triggered by disputes over land, livestock and access to water and grazing, with some 250 people reported killed in fighting between herders and farmers in recent months.

Tens of thousands have been forced to flee their homes, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

Sudan is also reeling from political turbulence in the wake of a coup led by military commander General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan on October 25.

Last week, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned looting and violence near a former UN logistics base in El-Fasher that had been recently handed over to the local authorities.

Over 14 million people, a third of Sudan’s population, will need humanitarian aid next year, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, the highest level for a decade.

Source: Radio Tamazuj

Curfew in North Darfur capital after WFP, UNAMID looting

A curfew came into effect in the North Darfur capital of El Fasher yesterday at 18:00 and continued until 05:00 today, in accordance with a decision of the North Darfur Security Committee after widespread looting of a warehouse of the UN World Food Programme (WFP), that followed the looting of the former African Union-United Nations Hybrid Operation in Darfur (UNAMID) logistical base north of El Fasher last weekend.

North Darfur Police Director and State Security Committee Rapporteur, Major General Abdelkarim Hamdo, called on the people to adhere to the daily curfew from 18:00 in order to preserve their lives. He said that the state security committee prepared at the same time a plan to secure strategic and vital facilities in the state

Mohamed Abdelkarim, head of the National Umma Party in North Darfur, warned of the danger of a series of attacks and looting on the headquarters of UNAMID and the World Food Programme in El Fasher, to markets, shops and banks.

He told Radio Dabanga from El Fasher yesterday that what is happening now in El Fasher, in terms of security chaos and looting of the headquarters of UNAMID and the World Food Programme, clearly represents the weakness of the ruling authority at all levels, and that the matter is planned and programmed. He explained that the general feeling of the citizen in El Fasher is that this series can be transmitted to the markets and banks at any moment.

Abdelkarim held the authorities fully responsible for what was happening, noting that the vehicles and counters were looted in broad daylight using large cranes and in front of the authorities’ eyes.

He said that the chaos in El Fasher now is due to the large number of armed militias and the multiplicity of undisciplined forces. He told Radio Dabanga that the security chaos and looting were carried out by these forces.

He called on the authorities to control these forces and to put any person outside the law in their aid, and warned against lawlessness and total chaos if urgent measures were not taken to put an end to this lawlessness.

Well-informed sources in El Fasher assert that the real looting of the headquarters of UNAMID took place in an organised and orderly manner three months ago by official authorities.

Activist Fatima Fadul told Radio Dabanga that the official looting of the mission headquarters in El Fasher began after the replacement of the governor of the state, Nimir Abdelrahman, the forces that were present with others.

She explained that an armed movement was accused of the looting of the mission headquarters, while an armed force led by a man calling himself Eisa El Maseeh (Jesus the Messiah), was accused of looting the stores of the World Food Programme, according to the testimony of the governor of the state.

Fadul said she expects the armed groups to attack markets and banks in El Fasher in the coming days.

In addition, sources warned of a health and environmental disaster in the region due to the waste left by the mission at the headquarters. Activist Fatima Fadul told Radio Dabanga that the people stormed the warehouses that contained the remnants of UNAMID batteries and equipment that posed a threat to human health, as well as indications of the danger of the warehouses that had been hit with weapons.

In this context, lawyers and human rights advocates called on the international bodies, in coordination with UNITAMS and the Government of Sudan, to intervene urgently to protect the headquarters of international organizations and institutions in Darfur in an urgent manner that does not accept delay so that the situation does not get out of control after the complete looting of the UNAMID mission and the warehouses of the World Food Programme in El Fasher by regular forces, rebel fighters and citizens.

Lawyer and human rights defender Jibril Hasabo said that urgent action to protect these decisions is necessary now so that the organizations that provide aid and protection to the people of Darfur are reassured. Hasabo said that the complete looting of the WFP stores in El Fasher will affect the displaced in the camps who receive services and aid from the programme, and it will also affect the security and safety of people, and in particular the displaced in El Fasher and the whole of Darfur.

He described what happened as a dangerous indicator of what will follow and cause panic and anxiety among international organizations working to ease the crisis and humanitarian aid in Darfur.

The General Coordination of the Camps for the Displaced and Refugees strongly condemned the looting of the headquarters of the UNAMID mission in the past, and the headquarters of the World Food Programme (WFP) in El Fasher.

In a statement yesterday, the Coordination holds the Sudanese government, its militias of various names, and the armed movements that signed the Juba Peace Agreement responsibility for the ongoing insecurity in the cities and localities of Darfur, especially the headquarters of the UNAMID mission previously, and the headquarters of the World Food Programme in El Fasher.

In the statement, the official spokesperson for the Coordination, Adam Rujal, called on the UN Security Council and the Troika countries to take serious and decisive decisions to protect the displaced and defenceless people in Darfur, and to immediately send an international force under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter, to make peace, for the sake of humanity only to save the lives of the remaining victims of the genocide in Darfur.

Source: Radio Dabanga

Sudan Security Forces Kill 4 Protesters as Thousands Rally

Sudanese security forces shot and killed four protesters on Thursday during demonstrations by tens of thousands who defied a security lockdown and severed communications to rally against military rule, medics said.

For more than two months, pro-democracy activists have kept up a campaign of street demonstrations against a military takeover in October.

A crackdown on the protests has now seen at least 52 people killed, according to the independent Sudan Doctors Committee, which is part of the pro-democracy movement.

On Thursday, security forces fired live bullets, killing four protesters in Omdurman, the twin city of the capital, Khartoum, and wounded dozens, the committee said.

“We call on doctors to come to the Arbain hospital in Omdurman because the putschists are using live rounds against protesters and preventing ambulances from reaching them,” it added.

Its plea was posted on social media accounts of Sudanese living abroad as authorities had severed domestic and international phone lines.

Web monitoring group NetBlocks said mobile internet services were also cut.

Communications were restored by evening when the demonstrators had dispersed.

The U.S. Embassy, which had called for restraint in the use of force, condemned the killing of protesters and also deplored “the violent attacks by Sudan’s security services on media outlets and journalists.”

U.N. Special Representative Volker Perthes called for “credible investigations into these violations.”

Despite the risks, protesters chanted “no to military rule” during rallies in several parts of Sudan demanding a transition to a civilian government.

‘Revolution continues’

They came within a few hundred meters of the presidential palace, the headquarters of top General Abdel-Fattah Burhan, who seized power on October 25.

Troops, police and paramilitary units launched multiple tear gas canisters into the crowd.

“The revolution continues,” protesters shouted, beating drums and waving flags.

“No to military rule” and “Soldiers back to the barracks,” they chanted in Khartoum and Omdurman.

Security forces deployed in strength across the capital, using shipping containers to block the Nile bridges that connect the capital with Omdurman and other suburbs.

The authorities also installed new surveillance cameras on major thoroughfares for Thursday’s protests.

Witnesses reported similar anti-coup protests in Wad Madani, south of the capital, and the cities of Kassala and Port Sudan in the east.

Saudi television Al-Arabiya said several of its journalists had been wounded in an attack by security forces on its Khartoum office

Another Saudi channel, ASharq, also reported that security personnel prevented its reporters from covering the anti-military rallies.

Burhan, who held civilian leader Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok effectively under house arrest for weeks, reinstated him on November 21 under a deal promising elections for July 2023.

Protesters said the deal had simply given a cloak of legitimacy to the generals, whom they accuse of trying to reproduce the former regime of autocratic President Omar al-Bashir, toppled in 2019 following mass protests.

“Signing with the military was a mistake from the start,” one protester said, accusing the generals of being “Bashir’s men.”

Sexual attacks

The Nile bridges were also blocked for previous protests on December 25, when tens of thousands also rallied.

About 235 people were injured during those demonstrations, according to the Doctors Committee, and tear gas was fired at demonstrators.

Activists have condemned sexual attacks during December 19 protests, in which the U.N. said at least 13 women and girls were victims of rape or gang-rape.

The European Union and the United States issued a joint statement condemning the use of sexual violence “as a weapon to drive women away from demonstrations and silence their voices.”

Sudan still has no functioning government, a prerequisite for the resumption of international aid cut in response to the coup.

More than 14 million people, a third of Sudan’s population, will need humanitarian aid next year, according to the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, the highest level for a decade.

Source: Voice of America

Gold mine collapse kills dozens in West Kordofan, Sudan

At least 38 people were killed and eight reported missing when a defunct private gold mine collapsed on top of them in Sudan’s West Sudan over the weekend, officials said.

The death toll rose after further bodies were found during rescue efforts, said Ismael Tissou, spokesperson for the Sudanese Mineral Resources Company, early Wednesday.

Tissou said the exact number of people buried is not clear.

The Darsaya mine near al-Nahud, a town about 500 kilometres (310 miles) west of Khartoum, was reopened after the government shut it down amid safety concerns.

Local media first reported that shafts in the Darsaya mine had given way, leading to 31 deaths and injuries, with the authorities later raising the toll to 38 death. Several others were reported injured in the collapse.

The state-run mining company posted images on Facebook showing hundreds of villagers lined at the site as heavy diggers tried to find more survivors and bodies. People were pictured preparing tombs for the victims in other social media images.

Another mining official said four miners were killed at the same mine in January. “Authorities at the time shut down the mine and installed security but a couple of months ago they left,” Dahwa said.

Gold mining flourished across Sudan about a decade ago amid rising inflation in one of the world’s poorest countries.

About two million traditional miners are involved in the search for gold across the country.

They often work in semi-legal mines across Sudan with ramshackle infrastructure in unsafe conditions.

Despite these precarious conditions, they unearth about 80% of the tons of gold Sudan produces each year, according to official figures.

Source: Radio Tamazuj

Sudan: Umma Party head meets with coup leader, new Marches of Millions today

Lt Gen Abdelfattah Burhan, President of the Sovereignty Council, discussed the current political impasse in the country with the acting head of the Umma Party, Maj Gen Fadul Burma, on Wednesday. Sudanese security forces and activists are prepared for new Marches of Millions in the country today.

In a press statement, the National Umma Party (NUP) said that the meeting that took place at the Republican Palace in Khartoum was characterised by “credibility and transparency”.

Burman handed a copy of the NUP’s new roadmap to solve the political impasse following the coup under the leadership of El Burhan end October.

The NUP head stressed his party’s keenness “to achieve consensus among all the forces of change without excluding or isolating anyone”. He added that “the party will seek to gather all political and societal forces and resistance committees to agree on a unified vision in order to resume legitimacy and complete the tasks of the transitional period”.

The two main factions of the Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC) have also presented position papers on a way out for the current political crisis.

On October 25, Sudan’s military under the leadership of El Burhan dissolved the country’s power-sharing government as agreed on in the August 2019 Constitutional Document and declared a State of Emergency.

Nearly one month later, on November 21, El Burhan and PM Hamdok signed an accord with the aim “to restore the transition to civilian rule”. The deal reinstated Hamdok, and tasked him with the formation of a new government consisting of technocrats until geneal elections will be held in July 2023.

Civilian groups including the FFC and the Sudanese Professionals Association, the driving force behind the 2018 December uprising rejected the agreement, refusing continued power-sharing with the military, a stance that is broadly backed by many Sudanese.

To date, no new government has been formed. Satee El Haj, a leading member of the FFC told Radio Dabanga on Tuesday that he expects an agreement soon. Any further delay in reaching an agreement between the political forces to move forward will have dire consequences for the country, he said.

Source: Radio Dabanga