A man walks by destroyed vehicles outside the headquarter of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitaries in southern Khartoum on April 19, 2023 amid fighting between Sudan's regular army and paramilitaries following the collapse of a 24-hour truce.
The US military has evacuated American embassy staff from Khartoum, President Joe Biden said Sunday, as fighting between the Sudanese army and a paramilitary group entered a second week following a brief lull.
The fighting in Sudan has left hundreds dead and thousands
wounded, while survivors cope with shortages of electricity and food.
"Today, on my orders, the United States military conducted an
operation to extract US Government personnel from Khartoum," Biden
said in a statement released late Saturday night, Washington time.
He expressed gratitude for the "unmatched skill of our
service members who successfully brought them to safety", adding that
Djibouti, Ethiopia and Saudi Arabia had helped in the operation.
The Rapid Support Forces (RSF), the heavily armed paramilitary group
currently challenging the authority of the regular army in the capital and
elsewhere, tweeted hours earlier that it had "coordinated with the U.S
Forces Mission consisting of 6 aircraft, for evacuating diplomats and their
families on Sunday morning".
Foreign countries have said they are preparing for the potential
evacuation of thousands more of their nationals, even though Sudan's main
airport remains closed.
More than 150 people from various nations had already reached the
safety of Saudi Arabia a day earlier, in the first announced evacuation of
civilians.
As the kingdom's naval forces transported the civilians, including
diplomats and international officials, across the Red Sea from Port Sudan to
Jeddah, fighting resumed in Khartoum after a temporary truce saw gunfire
momentarily die down on Friday, the first day of Eid al-Fitr.
Eid is normally a major celebration for Sudanese marking the end
of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
This year it is marked by fear, grief and hunger.
Earlier on Saturday, Sudan's army said its chief Abdel Fattah
al-Burhan had received calls from leaders of multiple countries to
"facilitate and guarantee safety for evacuating citizens and diplomatic
missions".
It noted that the evacuations were expected to begin "in the
coming hours", adding that the US, Britain, France and China were planning
to airlift their nationals out of Khartoum using military planes.
Burhan told Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya TV that the army was in control
of "all airports, except for Khartoum airport" and one in Nyala, the
capital of South Darfur.
Urban warfare began on April 15 between forces loyal to Burhan and
those of his deputy turned rival Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.
Dagalo commands the RSF, which emerged from the Janjaweed fighters
unleashed in Darfur by former leader Omar al-Bashir, drawing accusations of war
crimes.
Stench of blood
On Saturday, heavy gunfire, loud explosions and fighter jets were
heard in many parts of the capital, according to witnesses, despite the army
announcing an agreement to a three-day ceasefire a day earlier.
Two 24-hour ceasefires announced earlier in the week were also
ignored.
The RSF added in its Sunday statement that "we renew our
commitment to a ceasefire during the declared truce, to open up humanitarian
corridors and ensure the safety and wellbeing of the citizens".
Dagalo said in a statement he had "discussed the current
crisis" with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, and was "focused
on the humanitarian truce, safe passages, and protecting humanitarian
workers".
Five humanitarians, including four from UN-linked agencies, have
so far been killed.
In Khartoum, a city of five million people, the conflict has left
terrified civilians sheltering inside their homes. Many have ventured out only
to get urgent food supplies -- stocks of which are dwindling -- or to flee the
city.
While the capital has seen some of the fiercest battles, they have
occurred across the country.
Battles have raged in Darfur, where Doctors Without Borders (MSF)
in the city of El Fasher said their medics had been "overwhelmed" by
the number of patients with gunshot wounds, many of them children.
Crisis meeting
More plans are being made to evacuate foreigners, with South Korea
and Japan deploying forces to nearby countries, and the European Union weighing
a similar move.
The German ministers of defence and foreign affairs held a crisis
meeting Saturday on a possible evacuation, after three military transport
planes had to turn back Wednesday, according to German weekly Der Spiegel.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said more than 420 people had
been killed and over 3,700 wounded in the fighting across Sudan, but the actual
death toll is thought to be higher.
More than two-thirds of hospitals in Khartoum and neighbouring
states are now "out of service", and at least four hospitals in North
Kordofan state were shelled, the doctors' union said.
The World Food Programme said the violence could plunge millions
more into hunger in a country where one-third of the population needs aid.
Burhan and Dagalo's dispute centred on the planned integration of
the RSF into the regular army, a key condition for a deal aimed at restoring
Sudan's democratic transition after the military toppled Bashir in April 2019
following mass citizen protests.
In October 2021, Burhan and Dagalo joined forces to oust a
civilian government installed after Bashir's downfall.
Dagalo now says the coup was a "mistake", while Burhan
believes it was "necessary" to include more groups into politics.
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