Sudanese paramilitary commits to three-day ceasefire

Sudanese paramilitary group, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), declared a three-day ceasefire on Friday after previous attempts to halt the fighting, which had continued for the past seven days, had failed.

“We agreed to a humanitarian truce for a period of 72 hours, starting from six o’clock this morning. We note that the truce coincides with the blessed Eid Al-Fitr and to open humanitarian corridors to evacuate citizens,” the RSF said in a statement.

While expressing condolences to citizens for the “innocent lives lost” in the clashes, the group affirmed its “commitment, during the period of the declared armistice, to a complete ceasefire”.

The RSF further warned against the “continuous transgressions” of the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) “in not adhering to the declared armistice.” It remains uncertain whether the rival SAF will observe the truce, as it has not provided any indication of its intention to do so.

On Thursday, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called for an immediate ceasefire “for at least three days, marking the Eid al-Fitr celebrations, to allow civilians trapped in conflict zones to escape and to seek medical treatment, food, and other essential supplies.”

He emphasized that a temporary cessation of hostilities must be the first step toward ending the violence and paving the way for a permanent ceasefire. Guterres additionally called for “serious dialogue allowing for a successful transition, starting with the appointment of a civilian government.”

The RSF has accused the SAF of being led by extremist terrorists who want to stymie the country’s political process and obstruct the return to democracy. However, SAF General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan stated on Friday that the military remains committed to a transition to civilian rule. “We are confident that we will overcome this ordeal with our training, wisdom and strength, preserving the security and unity of the state, allowing us to be entrusted with the safe transition to civilian rule,” the army chief said in a video message released to mark the Muslim Eid al-Fitr celebration.

According to the World Health Organization, more than 400 people, including nine children, have been killed and at least 3,500 others injured in the Sudan conflict since it began last Saturday as an outcome of a power struggle between RSF General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo and his rival, Burhan.

Despite the 72-hour ceasefire, media reports suggest that fierce clashes are continuing, with heavy gunfire and explosions heard in Khartoum and other cities.

Source: Russia Today

Sudan army rules out talks as Türkiye, UN, Arab nations call for Eid truce

Fighting between two rival generals has shown no signs of abating ahead of festivities marking the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, with Sudan’s military chief refusing to hold talks with his opponent but saying he is open for mediation.

Sudan’s army chief General Abdel Fattah al Burhan received separate phone calls on Thursday from Turkish President Erdogan, Saudi and Qatari foreign ministers, Egyptian intelligence chief and the US, an army statement reported, calling for a temporary ceasefire.

The calls come amid efforts to get both the army and paramilitary Rapid Support Forces [RSF] to agree to a three-day ceasefire on Eid al Fitr that starts on Friday as explosions and gunfire resounded in Sudan’s capital for the sixth straight night.

All parties, including calls from the UN secretary general and South Sudan and Ethiopia leaders, affirmed the necessity to stop the violence and resort to dialogue.

More than 300 people have been killed since the fighting erupted Saturday between forces loyal to Sudan’s army chief and his deputy, Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, who commands the paramilitary RSF.

Some of the fiercest fighting has been in the capital of Khartoum, a city of five million people, most of whom have been sheltering at home without electricity, food or water.

As battles raged, Burhan dismissed any prospects for negotiations with Daglo, telling Al Jazeera television that he saw no option but “decisive military” action.

“I do not think there is any room for talks over politics again with the Rapid Support Forces,” he told the Qatar-based broadcaster, while adding that he was open to mediation.

After two ceasefires failed to take hold in two days, gunfire continued into Thursday night, with columns of black smoke rising from buildings around Khartoum International Airport and the army headquarters.

Beyond Khartoum, witnesses reported loud explosions in the city of Obeid, in the central state of North Kordofan.

Ahmed al Mandhari of the World Health Organization said on Thursday that “almost 330 people have died and almost 3,200 more” had been wounded in Khartoum, the western Darfur region and other states.

Roots of the conflict

The fighting has taken a heavy toll on civilians, with the UN children’s agency UNICEF saying “at least nine children have reportedly been killed”.

The World Food Programme [WFP] warned that the violence could plunge millions more into hunger in a country where 15 million people — one-third of the population — already face food insecurity.

It has suspended its Sudan operations after the killing of three WFP workers on Saturday.

Burhan and Daglo’s bitter dispute centred around the planned integration of the RSF into the regular army, a key condition for a final deal aimed at restoring Sudan’s democratic transition.

Both generals toppled long-time ruler Omar al Bashir together in April 2019 following massive protests against three decades of the iron-fisted rule.

In October 2021, they again worked together to oust the civilian government installed after Bashir’s downfall, derailing an internationally backed transition to democracy.

Burhan, whose career advanced under Bashir, has maintained that his coup was “necessary” to bring more factions into politics.

But Daglo, who rose to prominence during Bashir’s operation against Darfur rebels, has since called the coup a “mistake” that failed to bring change and instead invigorated Bashir diehards.

Source: TRTworld.com

King visits Royal Boats and Naval Force Command

His Majesty King Abdullah II, the Supreme Commander of the #Jordan Armed Forces-Arab Army, accompanied by His Royal Highness Crown Prince Al Hussein, on Friday visited the Royal Boats and Naval Force Command.

Source: Jordan News Agency

Theyab bin Zayed congratulates UAE Leaders Eid greetings

BU DHABI, 20th April, 2023 (WAM) — H.H. Sheikh Theyab bin Zayed Al Nahyan has congratulated President His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan on the occasion of Eid Al-Fitr. Sheikh Theyab also sent Eid greetings to His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President, Prime Minister, and Ruler of Dubai; H.H. Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Vice President, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Presidential Court, and the Supreme Council Members, Their Highnesses Rulers of the Emirates. ;quillbot-extension-portal Hatem Mohamed

Source: Emirates News Agency (WAM)

QandA: US Troops Positioned for Diplomats’ Evacuation Out of Sudan

The United States is deploying more troops at its base in Djibouti as it considers whether to evacuate diplomats from Sudan, where a power struggle between two military factions has led to days of violence that has killed more than 330 people.

John Kirby, National Security Council coordinator for strategic communications, spoke Friday with VOA’s White House Bureau Chief Patsy Widakuswara about the ongoing fighting in Sudan. He also previewed next week’s White House state visit by President Yoon Suk Yeol of South Korea.

This transcript has been edited for clarity and brevity.

VOA WHITE HOUSE BUREAU CHIEF PATSY WIDAKUSWARA: I’d like to start with Sudan. What’s the latest on the evacuation of American diplomats and the deployment of troops to the base in Djibouti?

NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL COORDINATOR FOR STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS JOHN KIRBY: There’s been no decision to evacuate our diplomats. We’re still focused right now on pre-positioning appropriate military capabilities nearby in the region, not in Sudan, just in case there is a decision made to evacuate our embassy.

The bottom line is the situation on the ground in Khartoum is not good. The violence continues, the fighting continues despite both sides calling or urging the other to abide by cease-fires. There’s still a lot of violence inside Khartoum, and so it’s a very tenuous, very dangerous situation. And as we’ve said, if you are an American citizen, and you didn’t take our warning to leave Sudan and particularly Khartoum, you need to take care of your own safety and security, shelter in place, find a place to stay where you can stay safe and not be moving around.

VOA: So there’s no evacuation for American citizens at this point?

KIRBY: There is no expectation that there’s going to be a U.S. government evacuation of American citizens. That remains the case right now.

VOA: Secretary [of State Antony] Blinken has called the leaders of both warring parties to push for a cease-fire. Obviously, that hasn’t happened. The U.S. has very limited leverage because we have pulled U.S. assistance since the coup in Sudan in 2021. Which countries in the region are you reaching out to, to help push for a cease-fire?

KIRBY: We’re talking to the African Union, we’re talking to the Arab League. Clearly, we’re talking bilaterally with other nations around Sudan in the region who obviously have a stake in making sure that peace and security, stability has a chance there in Sudan. And yes, we are reaching out directly. You’ve mentioned Secretary Blinken, but there are other lines of communication reaching out directly with the leaders on both sides there, General [Abdel Fattah] Burhan of the Sudanese Armed Forces and General [Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo] “Hemedti” of the RSF and to urge them to put down their arms, actually put in place a sustainable cease-fire so that humanitarian aid and assistance can get to the people that need it.

VOA: Would the U.S. administration consider any kind of punitive measures to push for a cease-fire?

KIRBY: I don’t have any muscle movements to speak to right now. We are focused right now on communicating to both sides they need to put their arms down, they need to stop the fighting. We need to get the ability for people to get access to food and water and medicine and again, to have a discussion about a transition to civilian authority.

VOA: And how concerned are you that this would turn into a proxy war, where outside groups such as the Wagner Group that’s already in the region might take opportunity from the chaos?

KIRBY: Obviously, we don’t want to see this conflict expand or broaden, and we certainly wouldn’t want to see additional firepower brought to bear; that will just continue the violence and continue to escalate the tensions.

VOA: I want to move on to the South Korean president’s visit next week. One of the leaks showed that there is concern from the South Koreans that President [Joe] Biden might push President Yoon [Suk Yeol] to supply military weapons, munitions particularly to Ukraine. Has this leak complicated the visit at all?

KIRBY: We are very excited about having our second state visit be the Republic of Korea. President Biden and President Yoon have a terrific relationship. We as a nation have a great relationship with the Republic of Korea, our South Korean allies. And it is an alliance. We have actual alliance commitments with South Korea. And there’s an awful lot on the agenda and it won’t just be Ukraine.

But there’s an awful lot of other things on the agenda, everything from high technology to climate change to certainly threats inside the Indo-Pacific region. Obviously, North Korea will be on the agenda. There’s a lot to talk about. And this is a terrific relationship.

VOA: President Yoon said he may be open to providing military support to Ukraine under some circumstances. Is this something that President Biden will push President Yoon for?

KIRBY: This isn’t about pushing South Korea at all. It’s about having a meaningful conversation about items of mutual shared concern and interest and certainly the war in Ukraine is something that South Korea shares that concern with. I’ll let President Yoon speak to what he is or isn’t willing to do.

We have said from the very beginning that what a nation decides to do with respect to supporting Ukraine is up to them to decide. It’s a sovereign decision. The whole idea of supporting Ukraine, this whole fight is about sovereignty. It’s about independence. And how ironic and hypocritical would it be for the United States to dictate terms to a sovereign nation about what they should or shouldn’t do.

VOA: Can we expect any kind of announcements in terms of extended deterrence, increasing U.S. strategic assets, any kind of joint operations of nuclear scenarios in the region?

KIRBY: We routinely talk to the South Koreans about the extended deterrence. I’m not going to get ahead of the president or any specific announcements or anything going forward.

VOA: On semiconductors, now that China cannot access U.S. technology but also Japanese and Netherlands technology for semiconductors, they are reaching out to South Korean companies. Is this something that the president will also discuss?

KIRBY: I have no doubt that they’ll talk about high technology and the need to keep improving, preserving, maintaining resilient supply chains when it comes to semiconductors. But I won’t get ahead of the conversation.

VOA: You mentioned today’s meeting in Ramstein, Germany, which marks one year that the Defense Contact Group has been meeting. Secretary [of Defense Lloyd] Austin said this morning that the focus will be on air defense, ammunition and logistics. What does that say in terms of where we are in the war right now and the strategy going forward?

KIRBY: We have evolved the capabilities that we are providing Ukraine … as the war itself has evolved over time. Here we are past a year. And we know that in the spring when the weather improves, and it’s already starting to improve, that we can expect the Russians to want to go on the offensive in some areas, and we don’t know exactly where or how they’ll do that. But we want to make sure that the Ukrainians are able to better defend themselves against that and if they choose offensive operations of their own, that they’ve got the capabilities to conduct those.

And you heard Secretary Austin talk about air defense, talk about armor capabilities because we believe that one of the things and they say they need to be better at is combined arms warfare, which is maneuver warfare in open terrain. That means, that requires armor, that requires artillery, that requires some air defense. But he also talked about logistics because that’s really the lifeblood of any army in the field, is how do you keep it in the field? How do you sustain it? How do you get him spare parts and food and water and fuel, the kinds of things that they need to maintain operations in a continuous way? So that’s got to be front and center as well.

VOA: Last question, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg this week said that Ukraine’s rightful place is in the Euro-Atlantic family. At this point, do you see Ukraine to be closer toward becoming a NATO member?

KIRBY: Nothing’s changed about our support for the Open Door Policy of NATO. Nothing’s changed about that. We continue to support an open door for NATO. But we’ve also said that any conversation about coming into the alliance has got to be a conversation between the nation in question and the alliance itself.

VOA: But do you see that Ukraine itself has improved on the criteria that it must meet?

KIRBY: Our focus right now with respect to Ukraine is making sure that they can beat back the Russian aggression. That they can be successful on the battlefield so that President [Volodymyr] Zelenskyy, if and when he’s ready to negotiate, he can be successful at the table. That’s our focus. We’ll let the secretary-general speak for the alliance.

Source: Voice of America

Sudan army general vows transition to democracy but Eid truce falls apart

Sudan’s top general has declared the military’s commitment to a civilian-led government, an apparent bid for international support days after brutal fighting between his forces and a powerful paramilitary group derailed hopes for the country’s democratic transition.

In his first speech since the conflict engulfed Sudan nearly a week ago, army chief Gen. Abdel Fattah Burhan pledged on Friday that the military would prevail and secure the vast African nation’s “safe transition to civilian rule.”

But for many Sudanese, Burhan’s claims rang hollow 18 months after he joined forces with his current rival to seize power in a coup that cast aside Sudan’s pro-democracy forces.

Burhan’s announcement came on the Muslim Eid al Fitr holiday, which marks the end of Ramadan and its month of fasting. “We are confident that we will overcome this ordeal with our training, wisdom and strength,” Burhan said, vowing to preserve “the security and unity of the state.”

The holiday — typically filled with prayer, celebration and feasting — was a sombre one in Sudan, as gunshots rang out across the capital of Khartoum and heavy smoke billowed over the skyline.

“Instead of waking up to the call to prayer, people in Khartoum again woke up to heavy fighting,” said Norway’s ambassador to Sudan, Endre Stiansen. “Can any hell be more horrible than this?”

Mosques held mass morning prayers inside to protect worshippers from intensified fighting.

The violence so far has killed 413 people and wounded 3,551 others, according to the latest toll from the World Health Organization. That includes at least nine children killed and 50 wounded in the fighting, said the United Nations Children’s Fund.

The United Nations’ migration agency said that one of its staff members had been killed in fighting in southern Sudan on Friday when his vehicle was caught in the crossfire between rival factions.

“It is with a heavy heart that I confirm the death of a dedicated IOM Sudan staff member this morning after the vehicle he was travelling in with his family south of El Obeid was caught in a crossfire between two warring parties,” Antonio Vitorino, the head of the UN’s International Organization for Migration, said in a statement.

Humanitarian crisis

Dallia Abdelmoniem, a 37-year-old baker from Khartoum, fled with her family on Thursday after a rocket sliced through her roof. The road to the city’s outskirts was littered with dead bodies. Abdelmoniem covered the eyes of her nieces and nephews.

“There is no safe place anymore in Khartoum,” she said from her new shelter outside the capital, where she could still hear the howl of artillery and gunfire on Friday. “Our number one priority is just to stay alive.”

The explosions rocking Khartoum followed frenzied international calls for a holiday cease-fire. After the United Nations and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken urged a respite from the spiralling violence, the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, promised to stop fighting for the three days of Eid al Fitr to allow for evacuations and safe corridors. But there was no response from Burhan’s military.

Such proposed pauses in the fighting have repeatedly collapsed over the past week.

The two generals vying for control over the vast African nation are also vying for acceptance by foreign powers, which have expressed support for the Sudanese seeking a transition to civilian rule. Both Burhan and his rival, RSF chief Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, have sought to portray themselves as supporters of democracy.

In 2019, they turned against long-time autocrat Omar al Bashir and pushed him out of power amid a popular uprising against his rule.

But since then, they have failed to implement agreements under which they would hand over power. Their forces crushed pro-democracy protests, and in 2021 they jointly carried out a coup that removed a transitional government and entrenched them as Sudan’s most powerful leaders.

The current explosion of violence between them came after Burhan and Dagalo fell out over a recent internationally-brokered deal with democracy activists meant to incorporate the RSF into the military and eventually lead to civilian rule.

No let-up

Since Saturday, the military and RSF have shown no sign of de-escalating their fight. The army on Thursday ruled out negotiations with the RSF, saying it would only accept its surrender.

The violence has already pushed Sudan’s population to the brink and opened a dark and tumultuous chapter in the country’s history.

Fears are mounting that the chaos in the strategically located nation could draw in its neighbours, including Chad, Egypt and Libya.

Over the past week, the bombardment and sniper fire has hit civilian infrastructure, including hospitals. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus decried what he called the “reprehensible” attacks on health facilities on Friday, saying they “not only jeopardise the lives of healthcare workers but also deprive vulnerable populations of essential medical care.”

The spokesperson for WHO, Margaret Harris, told reporters in Geneva that the violence has forced 20 health facilities nationwide to halt operations. According to UNICEF, a dozen other hospitals are at risk of shutting down, threatening some 50,000 severely malnourished children in Sudan who are administered regular feeding by tubes to survive.

Both the military and RSF have a long history of human rights abuses in Sudan. The RSF was born out of the Janjaweed militias, which were accused of widespread atrocities when the government deployed them to put down a rebellion in Sudan’s western Darfur region in the early 2000s.

“It’s really hard to remain calm,” said Abdelmoniem, describing shortages of fuel, medicine, cash and food causing desperation in much of Khartoum.

“People are telling me, ‘Happy Eid,’” she added. “But then I turn on the news.”

Source: TRTworld.com