UN aid chief hails talks with Sudan army leader

A Sudanese refugee speaks on the phone at the Tine transit camp in Chad, Nov. 8, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 11 November 2025
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UN aid chief hails talks with Sudan army leader

  • The UN official met with army chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan in Port Sudan, the de facto capital since the war began

PORT SUDAN: UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher held Tuesday what he called “constructive” talks with Sudan’s army chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan to ensure life-saving aid reaches all corners of the war-ravaged country.
Since April 2023, the war between Sudan’s army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has killed tens of thousands and displaced nearly 12 million, creating one of the world’s largest humanitarian crises.
“I very much welcome the constructive conversations I had with President Burhan... aimed at ensuring that we can continue to operate everywhere across Sudan to deliver in a neutral, independent and impartial way for all those who are in such dire need of international support,” Fletcher said, in a video released by Sudan’s Transitional Sovereignty Council.
The UN official’s comments came after he met with Burhan in Port Sudan, the de facto capital since the war began.
Fletcher arrived in Sudan on Tuesday for a week-long mission, pledging “to stop the atrocities, back peace efforts, uphold the UN charter, and push for our teams to get the access and funding they need to save lives across the battle lines.”
Burhan meanwhile affirmed “Sudan’s keenness to cooperate with the United Nations and its various agencies,” according to the army-backed council.
Fletcher also met top Egyptian and Sudanese diplomats and discussed ways of scaling up humanitarian aid, according to a statement from Cairo’s foreign ministry.

- Fighting persists -

The talks come two weeks after the RSF captured El-Fasher, the last army stronghold in western Darfur.
Reports of mass killings, sexual violence, abductions and looting have since emerged.
Burhan had previously vowed his forces would “take revenge” and fight “until this land is purified.”
Last Thursday, the RSF said it had agreed to a truce proposal put forward by the United States, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt.
But attacks have persisted.
On the day the paramilitaries agreed to the truce, the RSF shelled a hospital in the besieged city of Dilling in South Kordofan, killing five, while explosions were heard in the army-controlled capital Khartoum the following day.
The UN migration agency said nearly 39,000 people have fled fighting in several towns across the oil-rich Kordofan region since El-Fasher fell.
On Monday, the RSF deployed forces to the strategic city of Babanusa in West Kordofan, threatening to “fight until the last moment.”
In North Kordofan, residents told AFP they fear an imminent assault on El-Obeid, a key cross roads between Darfur and the national capital Khartoum.
Sudan’s army-aligned government has yet to respond to the truce proposal.

- ‘Grinding to a halt’ -

Since El-Fasher’s fall, nearly 90,000 people have fled, while tens of thousands remain trapped in “famine-like conditions as hospitals, markets and water systems collapse,” according to the UN migration agency.
Last week, the Rome-based Integrated Food Security Phase Classification declared famine in the city which has been under RSF siege for about 18 months.
Amy Pope, Director General of the International Organization for Migration, warned on Tuesday that without safe access and urgent funding, humanitarian operations “risk grinding to a halt at the very moment communities need support the most.”
UN Women’s Anna Mutavati said on Tuesday that women fleeing El-Fasher “have endured starvation... displacement, rape and bombardment,” with pregnant women giving birth “in the streets as the last remaining maternity hospitals were looted and destroyed.”
El-Fasher’s fall has given the RSF control over all five state capitals in Darfur.
Analysts say Sudan is now effectively divided with the RSF dominating all of Darfur and parts of the south while the army holds most of Sudan’s north, east and center.


Can AI really discover anything?

Updated 7 sec ago
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Can AI really discover anything?

  • Nobel Laureates discuss true impact on science at World Laureate Summit in Dubai

DUBAI: Since its rise, artificial intelligence has brought with it a promise of human and scientific progression beyond most people’s imaginations.

However, the spread of AI slop, fakes and proliferation of seemingly nefarious and useless applications have caused many to wonder whether the technology can really live up to its promise.

Scientists and academics gathered in Dubai on Sunday for the opening of the World Laureates Summit argued that the technology does, in fact, help them work faster, spot patterns and test ideas that would otherwise take years or decades.

“Can AI help us in speeding up discovery? Yes. Can it simplify the tasks and eliminate a lot of the trial and error that we chemists use to crystallize things. Yes. Will it get better? Yes,” Palestinian-Saudi Prof. Omar M. Yaghi, 2025 winner of the Nobel prize in chemistry, told the conference.

“I think we are in the middle of a revolution, transforming chemistry by blending it with AI.”

Yaghi said AI was already reducing the time it took chemists to crystallize molecules — a process that lines up atoms or molecules in a neat, repeating pattern rather than a jumble — from several years down to just two weeks. This, in turn, speeds up the process of scientific discovery and application.

His views were echoed by Prof. Tony Fan-cheong Chan, president of the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, who said AI had already contributed to Nobel Prize-winning discoveries.

However, he questioned the limits of AI saying that despite its ability to improve and accelerate science, humans still led the big, world-changing ideas.

“Here’s my thought experiment for all of you to consider: If someone besides Einstein had the best AI model pre-1905, would that person be able to discover the general theory of relativity?” Feng asked the crowd gathered in Dubai’s Madinat Jumeirah.

Robert Endre Tarjan, a prolific American computer scientist and mathematician, warned against AI — specifically for its inclination to “hallucinate.” He said he believed that regardless of how useful a tool it was, it could never replace human creativity and ingenuity in science.

“AI systems as we know them hallucinate; asking the right question is more important than finding the answer,” he said.

Russian mathematician Yurii Nesterov said AI was ultimately limited by the data made available to it. While he believes AI does have creative capacity, it depends how well it is programmed by humans.

“I believe that artificial intelligence has indeed a considerable creative power, it can discover new links, structures, and properties of the investigated objects,” he said.

“Artificial intelligence is already alive, and the main goal of the scientific community is to ensure the developments in the right directions.”

The World Laureates Summit, held in partnership with the World Governments Summit in Dubai, brings together some of the world’s most distinguished scientists, including Nobel Prize winners, Turing Award recipients, Fields Medalists and other award-winning researchers.