Sudan factions agree to extend ceasefire deal amid clashes
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[May 30, 2023]
By Khalid Abdelaziz and Aidan Lewis
DUBAI (Reuters) - Sudan's warring military factions agreed on Monday to
a five-day extension of a ceasefire agreement, after renewed heavy
clashes and air strikes in the capital threw fresh doubts on the
effectiveness of a truce designed to ease a humanitarian crisis.
Saudi Arabia and the United States, which brokered a week-long ceasefire
deal and have been monitoring it remotely, announced shortly before it
was due to expire on Monday evening the parties had agreed to extend it.
Although the ceasefire had been imperfectly observed, it had allowed the
delivery of aid to an estimated two million people, the two countries
said in a joint statement.
"The extension will provide time for further humanitarian assistance,
restoration of essential services, and discussion of a potential
longer-term extension," the statement said.
The U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) said starting on Saturday it had
been able to make its first food distributions in Khartoum since the
beginning of the conflict.
Sources with knowledge of the new deal said discussions on amendments to
make the truce more effective were continuing.
Hours before it was signed, residents reported battles in all three of
the adjoining cities that make up Sudan's greater capital around the
confluence of the Nile - Khartoum, Omdurman and Bahri. The intensity of
the fighting was greater than over the past three days, they said.
Sudan's army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have been
locked in a power struggle that erupted into conflict on April 15,
killing hundreds and driving nearly 1.4 million people from their homes.
Air strikes, which the army has been using to target RSF forces embedded
in neighbourhoods across the capital, could be heard in Omdurman on
Monday afternoon, residents said.
"Since yesterday evening there has been bombardment with all types of
weapons between the army and the Rapid Support," Hassan Othman, a
55-year-old resident of Omdurman, told Reuters by phone. "We're in a
state of great fear. Where's the truce?"
On past days, the truce deal had brought some respite from heavy
fighting, though sporadic clashes and air strikes have continued.
Saudi Arabia and the United States have previously said both sides had
committed various violations of the truce, as well as impeding
humanitarian access and restoration of essential services.
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A man walks while smoke rises above
buildings after aerial bombardment, during clashes between the
paramilitary Rapid Support Forces and the army in Khartoum North,
Sudan, May 1, 2023. REUTERS/Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah//File Photo
ORPHANAGE DEATHS
Sudan's health ministry has said more than 700 people have died as a
result of the fighting, though the true figure is likely much higher
because of the difficulty health and aid workers have had in
accessing conflict zones.
The government has separately recorded up to 510 deaths in El
Geneina, one of the main cities in Darfur, a western region already
scarred by conflict and displacement.
In Khartoum, factories, offices, homes and banks have been looted or
destroyed. Power, water and telecommunications are often cut, there
are acute shortages of medicines and medical equipment, and food
supplies have been running low.
At Sudan's largest orphanage, Reuters reported how dozens of babies
have died since the start of the conflict, which one Khartoum State
official attributed mainly to staff shortages and recurrent power
outages caused by the fighting.
The United Nations and aid groups say that despite the truce, they
have struggled to get bureaucratic approvals and security guarantees
to transport aid and staff to Khartoum and other places of need.
The WFP said it had begun three days of distributions in the capital
on Saturday and had reached more than 12,000 people in Omdurman in
areas controlled by the army as well as the RSF. It said it plans to
reach at least 500,000 people in Khartoum.
The WFP expects up to 2.5 million people in Sudan to slip into
hunger in the coming months, raising the number of people affected
by acute food insecurity to more than 19 million, or 40% of the
population.
The head of the U.N. refugee agency told Reuters that a projection
that one million people could flee Sudan by October may prove a
conservative estimate.
More than 350,000 people have already fled into neighbouring
countries, with most heading to Egypt, Chad and South Sudan.
(Reporting by Khalid Abdelaziz and Ahmed Eliman in Dubai, Aidan
Lewis in Cairo; Writing by Aidan Lewis, Editing by William Maclean,
Giles Elgood and Chris Reese)
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