‫شركة GameChange Solar تفوز بتنفيذ مجموعة من المشروعات بقدرة 2.3 جيجا وات لتوفير نظام Genius Trackers™ في فلوريدا بالولايات المتحدة الأمريكية

نورووك، ولاية كونيتيكت, 21 يناير 2023/PRNewswire/ — أعلنت شركة GameChange Solar اليوم عن فوزها بتنفيذ مجموعة من المشروعات يبلغ إجمالي قدرتها 2.3 جيجا وات في ولاية فلوريدا بالولايات المتحدة الأمريكية. وتضم هذه الأنظمة مواقع مصممة هندسيًا لرياح تبلغ سرعتها 150 ميل في الساعة.

GameChange Solar Awarded Group of Projects Totaling 2.3 GW for Genius Trackers™ in Florida, USA (PRNewsfoto/GameChange Solar)

وقد صرح ديريك بوتا، الرئيس التنفيذي للشؤون التجارية في شركة GameChange Solar ، قائلًا: “إن قدرة نظامنا المتين Genius Tracker ™ (جينيس تراكر) على تحمل سرعات رياح تتجاوز 150 ميلًا في الساعة قد أدت دورًا حاسمًا في قدرتنا على الفوز بهذه المجموعة العملاقة من المشروعات”.

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PCP rejects Egypt attempts to “hijack” Sudan’s political process

The Popular Congress Party (PCP), an Islamist group signatory of the framework agreement, rejected Egypt’s attempts to hijack the political process in Sudan.

During a meeting in Khartoum on January 2, the Forces for Freedom and Changes (FFC) explained to the visiting head of the Egyptian intelligence agency their position towards the initiative they prepare to launch and called to support their efforts to bring the main groups of the non-signatory group Democratic Bloc to join them.

However, Egypt recently extended invitations to the political forces for a 7-day workshop in Cairo on February 1-8 under the title: “Prospects for a democratic transition towards a Sudan that can accommodate all”. In response, the FFC issued a statement rejecting the initiative which is seen as an attempt to hamper an internal process to restore civilian rule.

In an interview with Arabi21, Kamal Omer, PCP Political Secretary, denounced the Egyptian invitation saying it was an attempt to hijack the political process supported by the international community and Gulf countries.

“Egypt has an important role to play in the political process in the country, as the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and some regional neighbouring countries. But, we will not accept hijacking the political process and turning it into an international initiative,” Omer said.

“We welcome the efforts of our Egyptian brothers in supporting the initiative, but we do not accept that the initiative is hijacked by anyone and taken to neighbouring countries. The regional and international community is just a peace broker,” he stressed.

Sudanese political forces are wondering about the trigger of such “aggressive and tardy” imitative.

Some say that the regime of President al-Sisi fears the development of a democratic regime in Sudan. Other say that Cairo does not accept the growing role played by the Gulf countries as some of them back the Ethiopian giant dam and want to develop agriculture sachems at the expense of its share of the Blue Nile water.

An Egyptian expert on Sudan Amani Al-Taweel, for her part, said Cairo wants to empower a faction of the Democratic Unionist Party led by Gaffer al-Mirghani who is not part of the process with the hope that the divided party can regain its place as the second political force in Sudan.

She further said earlier this month that Western powers have always worked to weaken ties between Sudan and Egypt and to empower the African component in Sudan.

Omer said that the Egyptian attempts have created a political crisis in Sudan, adding that ” some (Sudanese political) parties are run from Cairo”.

He further called on Egypt to change its support to military and authoritarian regimes in Sudan adding that “Sudan after the revolution will not accept a military regime”.

Speaking about their relationship with Egypt as an Islamist party he admitted that their position from the government of President al-Sisi is affected by the repression of Islamists in Egypt.

“We are politically and intellectually sympathetic to the Muslim Brotherhood. However, with regard to the Sudanese political crisis, we deal with Cairo independently from this matter,” he added.

The PCP joined the political process in Sudan after condemning the October 25, 2021 coup and voiced its support for democracy in Sudan.

Source: Sudan Tribune

S. Sudan’s Kiir directs payment of UN membership arrears

South Sudan president Salva Kiir has directed the payment for membership at the United Nations, reiterating the commitment of his administration and the country to continue playing a key role in the community of nations to promote peace and security.

Speaking to Sudan Tribune on Friday, the Presidential Affairs minister Barnaba Marial Benjamin said Kiir directed the Finance ministry to pay the outstanding arrears to the UN.

Media reports show South Sudan currently owes the world body $196,130.

“This is unfortunate, but the good news is that His Excellency President General Salva Kiir Mayardit has directed the minister of Finance and Economic Planning to look into that. You know the situation of our economy but we are also aware of our obligations,” he explained.

Marial was reacting to reports that South Sudan and other countries were denied voting rights at the UN General Assembly for failure to pay arrears.

Article 19 of the UN Charter says a member in arrears in the payment contributions cannot vote in the General Assembly if the amount equals or exceeds the amount of the contributions due for the preceding two full years.

“The General Assembly may, nevertheless, permit such a member to vote if it is satisfied that the failure to pay is due to conditions beyond the control of the Member,” partly states the article.

The UN General Assembly decided that Comoros, Sao Tome, Principe, and Somalia on the list of nations in arrears, would be able to keep their voting rights. It granted the three countries the same exemption last year.

The General Assembly admitted South Sudan as the UN’s193rd member in July 2011.

Source: Sudan Tribune

Do Sudanese military boycott security reform conference?

In a tweet posted recently, the head of the Umma Party, Mubarak Al-Fadil Al-Mahdi, predicted “the collapse of the framework agreement” after “the boycott” of the military component of conferences and workshops on the five sticky issues.

“Burhan’s announcement of his refusal to engage politicians in the situation of the army means a boycott of the security and military reform workshop,” further stressed al-Mahdi who is not a signatory of the framework agreement.

Nonetheless, the Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC) confirmed the participation of the military component in the security and military reform conference.

“Nothing prevents the military from participating in the conference, as they are the main concerned party by this issue and they are responsible for implementing reform,” an FFC Spokesman Shihab al-Tayeb told Sudan Tribune.

“The military has not yet shown any reluctance in this respect. We are on the same page and we are moving forward with the implementation of the framework agreement without a setback,” he stressed.

What is Burhan’s vision for military reform?

In response to this question, army spokesman Nabil Abdallah told Sudan Tribune, that he has no idea about that.

“I have no information on this subject,” Abdallah said before adding “If you review the statements of the commander-in-chief, you will find a clear vision in this regard.”

In a speech at the 57th Shooting Festival in Blue Nile State on January 15, 2023, al-Burhan stressed the importance of having a professional army away from politic and political organisations.

“No one can dismantle the army; no one can get his hand into it. They have nothing to do with it. We say to politicians who talk about the army, go and talk about your politics, and let us alone. We are able to put the army on the right path so that it becomes a professional and democratic army,” Burhan said.

“These forces will one day be under the authority of the civilian leadership that leads the state, when the right conditions are created,” he added referring to an elected government

Reforming not dismantling

A leading member of the National Umma Party (NUP) Urwa al-Sadiq minimized al-Burhan statements saying it was a speech before his troop to reassure them.

“This is an enthusiastic discourse from an officer to his forces. Some of it is objective and some other was exaggerated,” al-Sadiq told Sudan Tribune.

He underscored that the military establishment does need to be reformed, but they did never speak about dismantling the regular forces. He further said that the dismantlement has been mentioned for the economic companies of the military and security institutions.

Is the military reform process exclusive to the military?

The head of the SPLM- Revolutionary Democratic Current, Yasir Arman, in a talks show on S24 TV on January 18 stated that the security and military reform must be open to Sudanese, civilian and military, in order to create a political consensus on security arrangements.

“Still, there are technical aspects in the reform process that are left to the military alone. So, civilians cannot interfere in it, and this is understandable;” Arman added.

What are the requirements of the military on the reform conference?

FFC leading member Orwa al-Sadiq asserted that the military did not show any reservations or objections to the security and military reform conference. He further added that he various regular forces were engaged in preparatory workshops to draft papers for the conference and evaluate the process.

“The only condition set by the military is that the security and military reform conference be Sudanese without external interference, and to hold it in one of the security institutions,” he added.

The Trilateral Mechanism including the UNITAMS, the African Union and IGAD, has facilitated the political process.

Source: Sudan Tribune

Omda: ‘Humanitarian catastrophe looms for North Darfur displaced’

The humanitarian situation in Zamzam camp, one of the largest camps for the displaced in Darfur, has become extremely dire, according to community leaders. A poor harvest in 2022 has reportedly forced children to beg for food in the streets, while a scarcity of medicines is allowing malaria and other diseases to run rampant.

Zamzam camp, located 15 km south of the North Darfur capital El Fasher, was set up when the Darfur conflict broke out in 2003, and after two decades, accommodates at least 200,000 displaced people.

Camp community leader, Omda Jamal Abdelkarim, told Radio Dabanga that “the conditions in the camp are approaching a humanitarian catastrophe”. He laments the deteriorating health and humanitarian conditions, the spread of malaria and other diseases and fevers among children, and the scarcity of medicines in the camp which has led to people resorting to traditional medicines.

‘Children begging in the neighbourhoods in search of a living…’

Omda Abdelkarim voiced his grave concern that the poor harvest of 2022 has exacerbated acute food insecurity. He says that during the crucial rainy season, when many of the displaced cultivate crops near to the camp or in their traditional areas, “repeated incursions as armed herders drove their livestock to graze on farms led to the destruction of the crops this season, which in turn led to children begging in the neighbourhoods in search of a living”.

Abdelkarim appealed to international and national relief organisations to provide food and medicines to the camp.

Insecurity

In September 2022, activist leaders and residents of Zamzam camp staged a 17-day protest sit-in, which blocked the road linking El Fasher with the South Darfur capital of Nyala, because of the continuing attacks of gunmen on the displaced when they leave the camp, and the lack of basic services in the camp.

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Aid (OCHA) in Sudan projects in a report in the last quarter of 2022 that about 11 million people will need emergency assistance to meet life-threatening needs related to critical physical and mental health in 2023 – an increase of 21 per cent compared to 2022.

The number of people in need of humanitarian assistance in Sudan will rise to 15.8 million next year, equivalent to about a third of the population, which represents an increase of 1.5 million over this year, the OCHA reports states.

In June 2022, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) warned that the number of food insecure people in Sudan may ‘dramatically increase‘ to unprecedented levels and that the “already alarming food security situation is likely to worsen throughout the lean season in Sudan, predicting that by September 2022, up to 40 per cent of Sudanese could have slipped into food insecurity, the WFP and the Food and Agricultural Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) warned.

Source: Radio Dabanga

AU-IGAD-UN Trilateral Mechanism to organise conferences on Juba Peace Agreement and eastern Sudan track

The African Union (AU), Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD), UN Integrated Transition Assistance Mission in Sudan (UNITAMS) (AU-IGAD-UN) Trilateral Mechanism* is to organise dialogue conferences on the evaluation of the 2020 Juba Peace Agreement (JPA) and the issue of governance in eastern Sudan.

Following a meeting with the Trilateral Mechanism in Khartoum on Thursday, leading member of the mainstream Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC-Central Council) Khaled Omar Yousef said that their general plan for the upcoming two conferences on reviewing the JPA and the issue of eastern Sudan was approved, provided that the two events are organised by the AU-IGAD-UN mechanism.

The first conference, on the removal of empowerment**, which began on January 9, concluded in the Sudan capital last week. The political process in preparation for the signing of a final agreement with the military junta for the transition to civilian-led government, will soon begin with its second conference on (transitional) justice, leading member of the mainstream Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC-Central Council) and spokesperson for the current political process, Yousef reported in a previous press conference in Khartoum.

More than 40 political parties and civil society groups signed a Framework Agreement with the military junta on December 5 last year. It was agreed that negotiations between the signatories on five contentious issues would be launched as soon as possible in five dialogue conferences in Khartoum.

The FFC-CC alliance has organised the first three conferences, on empowerment removal, transitional justice, and military and security reform, that have to be agreed on by the internally differing signatories before presenting their common views to the junta in a draft Final Agreement.

SPLM-N

Yasir Arman, founder of the SPLM-N-Democratic Revolutionary Movement which is a member of the FFC-CC alliance told Radio Dabanga: “We are now working on the programme for the conference on justice and transitional justice, together with relatives of victims in all parts of Sudan and the Trilateral Mechanism.”

He said that they are also discussing the conference on eastern Sudan, but that this is not easy. “It is true that the east has a just cause, but we should not confuse the cause of the east with the issues of the affiliates [of the regime of Omar Al Bashir], who are using the issue of the east to abort the democratic transition,” Arman asserted.

Source: Radio Dabanga