Rare food aid convoy enters Sudan from Chad

A handout image shows aid trucks with relief material for Sudan’s Darfur region, at a location given as the border of Chad and Sudan, released on August 21, 2024. (X/@UNHCRinSudan/Handout via Reuters)
Short Url
Updated 22 August 2024
Follow

Rare food aid convoy enters Sudan from Chad

  • WFP trucks were carrying sorghum, legumes, oil and rice for around 13,000 people threatened with famine in the Kereinik region

PARIS: The World Food Programme has announced the arrival of a rare convoy of humanitarian aid into civil war-torn Sudan via a temporarily reopened border crossing with Chad.
“More than a dozen aid trucks — including some from the WFP and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) — have now crossed into Darfur from Chad via the Adre border crossing” in Sudan’s west, UN chief Antonio Guterres’ spokesman Stephane Dujarric told journalists Wednesday.
The WFP trucks were carrying sorghum, legumes, oil and rice for around 13,000 people threatened with famine in the Kereinik region in western Darfur, Dujarric said.
Meanwhile the IOM brought “essential relief items” for around 12,000 people, the spokesman added.
Fighting broke out in April last year between Sudan’s army, led by Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) led by his former deputy Mohammed Hamdane Dagalo.
More than 25 million people have been pitched into acute hunger by the conflict, according to UN figures — over half of Sudan’s total population.
“The re-opening of the Adre crossing is critical for the effort to prevent famine from spreading across Sudan, and it must now stay in use,” WFP executive director Cindy McCain said in a statement Wednesday.
“I want to acknowledge all parties for taking this vital step to help WFP get lifesaving aid to millions of people in desperate need,” she added.
McCain said further border crossings should be reopened and humanitarian corridors created to enable more aid to be brought in, insisting that “this is the only way to avoid widespread starvation.”
Sudan’s government has said that the Adre crossing will remain open for the three coming months.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) also hailed Thursday the opening of the border crossing as a “positive first step,” but also said it should be for longer.
“The three months coincide with the rainy season, which naturally complicates access because of heavy rains and flash floods,” the aid group said in a statement.


US condemns Houthi detention of embassy staff in Yemen. Guterres seeks release of all detained UN staff

Updated 11 December 2025
Follow

US condemns Houthi detention of embassy staff in Yemen. Guterres seeks release of all detained UN staff

  • US State Department says the sham proceedings only prove that the Houthis rely on the use of terror against their own people to stay in power
  • UN Secretary General says the continued Houthi detention and prosecution of UN personnel is a violation of international law

WASHINGTON/UNITED NATIONS: The US on Wednesday condemned the ongoing detention of current and former local staffers of the US embassy in Yemen by the Houthi movement.
“The United States condemns the Houthis’ ongoing unlawful detention of current and former local staff of the US Mission to Yemen,” US State Department spokesperson Tommy Pigott said in a statement.
“The Houthis’ arrests of those staff, and the sham proceedings that have been brought against them, are further evidence that the Houthis rely on the use of terror against their own people as a way to stay in power,” Pigott said.

Earlier, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called on Houthi rebels not to prosecute detained UN personnel and to work “in good faith” to immediately release all detained staff from the UN and foreign agencies and missions.
Guterres condemned the referrals of the UN personnel to the Houthis’ special criminal court and called the detentions of UN staff a violation of international law, UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.
There are currently 59 UN personnel, all Yemeni nationals, detained by the Iranian-backed Houthis, in addition to dozens from nongovernmental organizations, civil society and diplomatic missions, he said.
He said a number of them have been referred to the criminal court in Yemen’s capital, Sanaa. “There were procedures going on in the court, I believe, today and all of this is very, very worrying to us,” Dujarric said.
The court in late November convicted 17 people of spying for foreign governments, part of a yearslong Houthi crackdown on Yemeni staffers working for foreign organizations.
The court said the 17 people were part of “espionage cells within a spy network affiliated with the American, Israeli and Saudi intelligence,” according to the Houthi-run SABA news agency. They were sentenced to death by firing squad in public, but a lawyer for some of them said the sentence can be appealed.
UN human rights chief Volker Türk said in a statement Tuesday that one of those referred to the court was from his office. He said the colleague, who has been detained since November 2021, was presented to the “so-called” court “on fabricated charges of espionage connected to his work.”
“This is totally unacceptable and a grave human rights violence,” Türk said.
He said detainees have been held in “intolerable conditions” and his office has received “very concerning reports of mistreatment of numerous staff.” Dujarric said some have been held incommunicado for years.
Dujarric said the UN is in constant contact with the Houthis, and the secretary-general and others have also raised the issue of the detainees with Iran, Saudi Arabia, Oman and others.
The Houthis seized Sanaa in 2014 and since then they have been engaged in a civil war with Yemen’s internationally recognized government, which is supported by a Saudi-led military coalition.
The November verdict was the latest in the Houthi crackdown in areas of Yemen under their control. They have imprisoned thousands of people during the civil war.