US urges warring Sudan parties to start peace talks

People sit around food cooking on a bonfire at a school that has been transformed into a shelter for people displaced by conflict in Sudan. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 13 September 2023
Follow

US urges warring Sudan parties to start peace talks

  • Washington working with Saudi Arabia and others to end ‘unconscionable’ conflict, says Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the US ambassador to the UN
  • Hundreds of children with acute malnutrition at refugee camps in border region between Chad and Sudan

WASHINGTON: Sudan’s warring parties must end their “unconscionable war” through dialogue, a senior US diplomat urged at a press briefing here on Tuesday, highlighting the acute suffering of refugees during a recent visit to camps at the border between Chad and Sudan.

Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the US ambassador to the UN, also reiterated an earlier announcement that the US has committed over $160 million in new aid to assist Sudan’s refugees and host countries in the region. This brings the US aid package to about $710 million.

Thomas-Greenfield said during the briefing attended by the Arab News that she witnessed firsthand the plight of Sudan’s refugees during her tour of camps in the border town of Adre inside Chad last week.

“While in Adre, I saw this lifesaving work firsthand, including at an MSF (Doctors Without Borders) hospital where hundreds of children were being treated for acute malnutrition — children who were severely underweight, whose ankles were swollen from malnutrition, and who were too weak to speak or cry. It was perhaps one of the saddest experiences of my life,” she said.

She highlighted an earlier announcement that Washington has imposed new sanctions on those it holds responsible for committing atrocities against civilians in Darfur and other parts of Sudan.

The sanctions have targeted Abdelrahim Hamdan Dagalo, a senior commander in Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces and the brother of RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.

She added that the US State Department has imposed visa restrictions on RSF general and West Darfur commander Abdul Rahman Juma for his alleged involvement in gross violations of human rights.

Thomas-Greenfield stressed that Washington had urged the parties to seek a resolution through dialogue. “We’re not supporting either side. We’re supporting the people of Sudan,” she said.

She called on the international community to work together to alleviate the suffering of Sudan’s refugees. “The United States cannot do this alone.”

“A crisis of this magnitude requires global cooperation, and right now the Humanitarian Response Plan for 2023 is less than 30 percent funded. I will continue to call on the international community to step up, just as I will continue to call on the international community to do everything possible to prevent and respond to mass atrocities and to hold those responsible for ongoing horrors in Sudan to account.”

Thomas-Greenfield said the US has encouraged countries and groups in the region to reengage with the warring parties in Sudan.

“We’re engaging with all of the parties in the region — the neighbors, the Arab League, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, African Union to bring all of the regional forces together to pressure the two parties to end this unconscionable war,” she said.

The fighting in Sudan erupted in April between troops loyal to Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, the head of Sudan’s regular army, and his former deputy Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, who commands the RSF, a heavily armed militia which was previously aligned with the army.

The UN and Sudanese officials have over the past few months warned of a major humanitarian disaster because of the conflict.

More than 3.6 million people have been displaced within Sudan’s borders and another 950,000 are seeking safety in neighboring countries — notably Chad,

Egypt, South Sudan, the Central African Republic and Ethiopia, according to the UN.

Countries in the region have failed repeatedly to get the warring parties to sign a peace agreement.


Activists plan new, bigger flotilla to try to bring aid to Gaza

Updated 9 sec ago
Follow

Activists plan new, bigger flotilla to try to bring aid to Gaza

  • Activists previously detained by Israel plan new flotilla
  • Israeli officials denounce such missions as stunts
JOHANNESBURG: Activists behind a flotilla intercepted at sea last year by Israel while trying to bring aid to Gaza will try again this year, expecting more than twice as many boats carrying up to 1,000 medics, they said on Thursday.
The Israeli military halted the roughly 40 boats in the Global Sumud Flotilla last October as ‌they attempted ‌to reach blockaded Gaza, arresting Swedish ‌activist ⁠Greta Thunberg and more ‌than 450 other participants.
Organizers, who gathered on Wednesday at the foundation of late South African leader Nelson Mandela in Johannesburg, said they hope to bring 100 boats for their next attempt.
“It is a cause ... for those that want to rise and stand for justice and dignity for all,” Mandela’s ⁠grandson Mandla Mandela, who was among activists detained last time, told the ‌gathering. “We want to mobilize the ... global ‍community to join forces with us.”
Israeli ‍officials repeatedly denounced last year’s mission, and previous smaller-scale ‍attempts to reach Gaza by sea, as publicity stunts.
Israel, which controls all access to the Gaza Strip, denies withholding supplies for its more than 2 million residents. Palestinians and international aid bodies say supplies reaching the territory are still insufficient, despite a ceasefire reached in October which included guarantees of ⁠increased aid.
Following the ceasefire, Israeli forces now control more than 53 percent of the Gaza Strip where they have ordered residents out. Nearly the entire population is crowded into a narrow strip along the coast, mostly living in makeshift tents and damaged buildings.
If the flotilla is blocked again, the activists said it would still be worth it to highlight Gaza’s plight.
“We may not have reached Gaza physically (but) we have reached ... the people in Gaza,” said one of the activists, Susan Abdallah. “They ‌know that we care, that we will not stop at anything until we actually break the siege.”