King of Jordan plans White House visit

Jordan’s King Abdallah II walks with Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi in Amman, Jordan. (Reuters)
Updated 31 March 2017
Follow

King of Jordan plans White House visit

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump will welcome the king of Jordan to the White House next week.
Press Secretary Sean Spicer says that King Abdallah II will visit the White House on April 5. The two are slated to discuss “a range of shared interests in the Middle East,” including the fight against the Daesh group, the conflict in Syria and Israeli-Palestinian relations.
Trump will also be welcoming President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi of Egypt on April 3.
Trump met briefly with King Abdallah II at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington last month.
A White House said the two discussed the possibility of establishing safe zones in Syria, among other issues.


RSF-encircled city in Sudan’s Kordofan targeted by drones: witness, military source

Updated 14 sec ago
Follow

RSF-encircled city in Sudan’s Kordofan targeted by drones: witness, military source

  • The drone strikes hit a military base, a police headquarters, and the regional parliament
  • A military source said the army’s air defenses had intercepted 20 aerial targets

PORT SUDAN: The city of El-Obeid in Sudan’s Kordofan region, largely encircled by paramilitary forces, was targeted by a drone attack on Friday that hit multiple government-linked facilities, several witnesses told AFP.
The drone strikes, which began early in the morning and lasted two hours, hit a military base, a police headquarters, the regional parliament and the premises of a telecoms company, witnesses said.
A military source told AFP that the army’s air defenses had intercepted 20 aerial targets.
Since April 2023, Sudan’s army has been waging a war with the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) that has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced millions more and created a grinding humanitarian crisis.
El-Obeid, located about 350 kilometers (220 miles) southwest of Khartoum, remains under army control after it managed to loosen a lengthy RSF siege last February.
The paramilitary force, however, has redoubled its efforts to take the city after forcing the army out of neighboring Darfur last year, cutting off most access routes in and out.
El-Obeid lies along a strategic route linking Darfur and Khartoum.
More than 88,000 have fled the Kordofan region since October.