Thousands flee as paramilitaries gain ground in Sudan aid hub

1 / 2
Displaced people fleeing from Wad Madani in Sudan's Jazira state arrive in Gedaref in the country's east on December 17, 2023. (AFP)
2 / 2
People displaced by the conflict in Sudan get on top of the back of a truck moving along a road in Wad Madani, the capital of al-Jazirah state, on December 16, 2023. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 17 December 2023
Follow

Thousands flee as paramilitaries gain ground in Sudan aid hub

  • The United Nations said 14,000 people had fled the area so far, and a few thousand had already reached other cities. Half a million people had sought refuge in Gezira, mainly from Khartoum

WAD MADANI: Paramilitary forces established a base on Sunday in the formerly safe city of Wad Madani in Sudan, an AFP correspondent reported, sending thousands fleeing, many of them already displaced.
Thousands have sought to escape the former aid hub since the war between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces or RSF reached Wad Madani on Friday, according to the UN.
But they faced prohibitive costs and other hurdles, according to AFP’s correspondent.
Previously, the city had been “one of Sudan’s few remaining sanctuaries,” according to the Norwegian Refugee Council’s Sudan director William Carter.

FASTFACT

US Ambassador John Godfrey urged the Rapid Support Forces to ‘cease their advance’ on Al-Jazirah state, where nearly half a million displaced people had sought refuge, and to ‘refrain from attacking’ state capital Wad Madani.

Echoing the brutal urban warfare in the capital Khartoum, 180 km north, fighter jets flew overhead as the sound of explosions echoed across the Wad Madani, according to an AFP correspondent who said the RSF had set up a base in the city’s east.
American Ambassador John Godfrey urged the RSF to “cease their advance” on Al-Jazirah state, where nearly half a million displaced people had sought refuge, and to “refrain from attacking” state capital Wad Madani.
“A continued RSF advance risks mass civilian casualties and significant disruption of humanitarian assistance efforts,” Godfrey said in a statement on Sunday.
Regional bloc IGAD’s executive secretary Workneh Gebeyehu said he was “extremely concerned by the resurgence of conflict” and called for the cessation of hostilities.
Wad Madani alone houses more than 86,000 displaced people, according to figures from the UN, which has suspended all humanitarian field missions in Al-Jazirah state.
More than 270,000 of the city’s 700,000 residents had been dependent on humanitarian aid, the UN said.
The war between army chief Gen. Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and his former deputy, RSF commander Mohammed Hamdan Daglo, has destroyed the country’s already fragile infrastructure, economy and health care system.
By early December, it had killed at least 12,190 people, according to a conservative estimate by the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project.
According to UN figures, over 5.4 million people are internally displaced, while about 1.3 million have fled abroad.
Families scrambled Sunday to once again flee to safety but found bus tickets had quadrupled to $60 a head, and many had nowhere to go.
“A continuous flow of people, many of them who already ran for their lives just a few months ago, are now rushing toward already heavily burdened and resource-depleted cities in neighboring states,” the NRC’s Carter said.
“We are also extremely worried for highly vulnerable families in Wad Madani who have been crammed into displacement sites in schools for months and have nowhere to hide from violence, no means to escape, and nowhere else to flee,” Carter added.
Sudan’s doctors’ union said Sunday the situation in the city has become “catastrophic” after pharmacies were forced shut.
Both forces have been accused of indiscriminate firing on residential areas, as well as targeting civilians, activists and health care personnel.

 


Lebanese government imposes immediate ban on Hezbollah’s military activities

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Lebanese government imposes immediate ban on Hezbollah’s military activities

 

BERUIT: Lebanon's government said Hezbollah’s overnight attack against Israel were “illegal” and imposed an immediate ban on the group’s military activities, while also demanding its hand over its weapons.

Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said only the state could decide whether to go to war and called on the Lebanese military to prevent the firing of projectiles and detain anyone involved.

The move comes after Iran-backed Hezbollah launched rockets at Israel, provoking retaliatory Israeli strikes. The government convened for five hours and 15 minutes in an early morning meeting on Monday before reaching its decision.

The Lebanese cabinet meeting, chaired by President Joseph Aoun, started at 8am with ministers discussing the repercussions Hezbollah's launching of missiles from southern Lebanon into Israel and the Israeli attacks on Lebanon.

Sources initially told Arab News that ministers were “pushing for a decisive response to Hezbollah’s recklessness, regardless of the consequences.”

Lebanese MP Melhem Khalaf said the priority was to “shelter people that are evacuating their homes in relatively safe places. What happened at dawn on Monday has taken us from one stage to another, and we don't know where they've taken us.”

As US-Israeli attacks on Iran continued, Hezbollah said it fired missiles from Lebanon into Israel early Monday in response to the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and “repeated Israeli aggressions.”

There were no reports of injuries or damage, and Israel said it had intercepted one projectile, while several fell in open areas.

Israel retaliated with strikes on Lebanon, killing at least 31 people and wounding 149 others, according to Lebanon's Health Ministry. Around two thirds of the dead were in the south of the country.

Lebanon’s government said it was holding an emergency meeting after Hezbollah’s attack triggered the Israeli airstrikes.

Iran has been firing missiles at Israel and Arab states in a counter-offensive since the joint America-Israeli attack Saturday that killed Khamenei and other top Iranian officials. The war has quickly expanded to proxy forces, including Hezbollah firing out of Lebanon.

MP Bilal Abdullah told Arab News: “All the appeals issued by officials in Lebanon not to embroil us in this destructive war seem to have been in vain. We were supposed to protect Lebanon.

“Whoever launched the missiles and drones from Lebanon has slaughtered Lebanon. Displacing people is a major tragedy. We are in the winter season, and the cold is severe.”