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Dark Ages For Sudan, A Call For Action. Government Orders Foreigners Including South Sudanese Out Of Khartoum due to civil wars.

Updated: Jul 21, 2024

Author: Charles Opendi

Sunday, 14Th July 2024.

Published By: Alhadi Hawari, Eye radio (https://www.eyeradio.org ) on Friday, July 12, 2024.


Figure 1. Sudanese protesters walk past burning tires as they rally to protest against the October 2021 Military coup, in the capital Khartoum, on January 9, 2022.


Summary

Once home to millions of refugees, Sudan now has millions of its own citizens as refugees in Africa and many parts of the world with the latest updates of eviction of foreigners from its capital, Khartoum within two weeks as per Col. Nazar Khalil’s statement published in the Government owned Sudan News Agency (SUNA) to the Director of the department of Foreigners and Immigration control. As the civil war enters its second year, Sudan’s two warring factions remain locked in a deadly power struggle. Since the conflict began on April 15, 2023, almost 15,000 people have been killed, and more than 8.2 million have been displaced, giving rise to the worst displacement crisis in the world. Nearly 2 million displaced Sudanese have fled to unstable areas in Chad, Ethiopia, and South Sudan, overrunning refugee camps and prompting concerns that Sudanese refugees could soon attempt to enter Europe. The UN continues to plead for more support as more than 25 million need humanitarian assistance, and deteriorating food security risks are triggering the “world’s largest hunger crisis.” Meanwhile, mediation efforts have failed to produce results as the leaders of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and Rapid Support Forces (RSF) refuse to halt their violence, and regional and international actors have taken sides in the war. As conditions further deteriorate, the World Food Program’s Carl Skau warned, “we are running out of time.”


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