
Sudan's Interior Minister to Asharq Al-Awsat: Khartoum Secure, Police Deployed Across Capital
Speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat, Samra said the return of displaced citizens would help reinforce security, noting that "some armed groups operate in deserted neighborhoods with low civilian presence."
"There's no place on earth entirely free of crime, but we are now in a post-war phase, and the police have complete control over the capital and other areas," he said, adding that residents should report any assaults to the police, whose stations now operate around the clock.
Sudanese forces recaptured Khartoum from the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in May, after more than two years of fighting that devastated the city and forced millions to flee.
The war, which erupted on April 15, 2023, between the army and the RSF, turned Khartoum and surrounding cities like Omdurman into battlegrounds.
Samra dismissed reports that armed groups disguised in military uniforms were still threatening civilians, saying such groups had been neutralized. "The regular forces are disciplined and protect citizens from criminal gangs," he said.
Crackdown on antiquities smuggling
The minister also revealed that foreign nationals were arrested in the northern city of Atbara attempting to smuggle Sudanese antiquities out of the country. They are now facing trial, though Samra declined to specify their nationalities or intended destination.
"These individuals are part of a criminal network specialized in antiquities theft," he said.
The RSF had previously been accused of looting Sudan's national museums during the war, with artifacts dating back thousands of years allegedly stolen or destroyed.
Samra pledged to recover smuggled antiquities through cooperation with Interpol. "We are receiving important updates and expect to retrieve key items soon," he said, blaming the RSF for attempting to alter Sudan's demographic and cultural identity by targeting universities and museums.
A joint committee from the criminal investigation department and the Ministry of Culture has been formed to catalogue looted artifacts and open official cases. "We've shared our findings with Interpol," Samra said.
Rebuilding police infrastructure
The minister said restoring damaged police stations targeted by what he called "terrorist militias" remains a key challenge, though some facilities have already been rehabilitated.
He said the Interior Ministry has resumed operations in Khartoum, with 98 out of 101 police stations back online and equipped with both static and mobile patrols.
"When the war broke out, police were present in the capital. But after our facilities were destroyed, we had to relocate forces to safer areas like Karari locality," he added.
Khartoum has seen a gradual return of displaced residents from other states, despite ongoing violence in parts of the country. The army-aligned government, which relocated to the coastal city of Port Sudan early in the war, has been working to restore basic services and bury the dead.
Monumental rebuilding task
Prime Minister Kamal Idris vowed Saturday to rebuild Khartoum, during his first visit to the capital since taking office in May. Touring the destroyed airport, bridges, and water stations, Idris unveiled ambitious reconstruction plans aimed at encouraging millions of displaced residents to return.
"Khartoum will rise again as a proud national capital," he declared.
Army chief and head of the Sovereignty Council, Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, also arrived at the airport, which was retaken by the army in March after nearly two years under RSF control. The government has estimated the total cost of rebuilding Sudan at $700 billion, with Khartoum alone accounting for nearly half that amount.
Idris later visited the destroyed al-Jaili refinery north of the capital, promising its restoration. The facility, once processing 100,000 barrels per day, was recaptured in January, but repairs are expected to take years and cost at least $1.3 billion.
Meanwhile, the government continues to remove unexploded ordnance and reestablish administrative services in the devastated city, underscoring the immense task of rebuilding Sudan's capital from the ruins of war.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arab News
9 hours ago
- Arab News
Angola unrest death toll rises to 30
The police did not say what caused the deaths but civil society groups and opposition parties blamed the security forcesLourenco said 'law enforcement acted within the framework of their obligations and therefore the order was promptly restored'LUANDA: Angolan President Joao Lourenco praised security forces Friday for quelling unrest that claimed 30 lives over two days but rights groups accused them of killing 'defenseless people.'Dozens of shops and warehouses in Luanda were looted and vehicles attacked on Monday and Tuesday when a strike against a fuel price hike descended into some of the worst violence in the oil-rich country in unrest spread to several provinces and police said that by late Thursday they had confirmed 30 deaths, including of a police officer, with more than 270 people injured, among them 10 members of the defense and security police did not say what caused the deaths but civil society groups and opposition parties blamed the security forces, who are regularly accused of using excessive force against his first public comment on the situation, Lourenco said 'law enforcement acted within the framework of their obligations and therefore the order was promptly restored.''We send our thanks to the law enforcement, the justice authorities, the health professionals...,' he than 1,500 people were arrested, 118 businesses vandalized and 24 public buses attacked, according to police.'We strongly condemn such criminal acts, we regret the loss of human lives...,' the president said, announcing the government would help looted businesses to replenish their from the MPLA party in power since independence from Portugal in 1975, made no mention of the July 1 hike in heavily subsidised fuel prices that has led to a series of demonstrations in a country with a high level of poverty despite its vast oil state is 'doing its best' to address Angola's social problems, he said, citing investments in health, education, housing and job and civic groups also condemned the vandalism but accused security forces of using excessive looting reflects 'the hunger and extreme poverty affecting the majority of Angolans,' said the Human Rights Monitoring Working Group of various NGOs late 'legitimate expressions of the population's indignation should not be used as justification to kill defenseless people,' it platform urged Lourenco to order the security forces to 'refrain from killing defenseless people' and create an independent commission to investigate the killings as well as compensation for the families of the of some of the people killed in the unrest have circulated on social media, with the case of Silvia Mubiala, a mother of six children allegedly shot and killed by police while trying to protect her son in Luanda, causing particular outrage.


Arab News
13 hours ago
- Arab News
DR Congo, Rwanda hold first talks after peace deal
NAIROBI: The Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda have held their first talks after signing a peace deal to end decades of deadly conflict in mineral-rich eastern Congo, the two countries said on DRC, a region bordering Rwanda with lucrative natural resources, has been plagued by violence for more than three decades and the unrest has claimed thousands of crisis intensified early this year when the M23 armed group and Rwandan troops captured the major city of Goma in January, followed by Bukavu in February, setting up parallel administrations in had previously opposed direct dialogue with the M23 and diplomatic attempts, including mediation by Angola, the surprise intervention of Qatar succeeded in bringing together Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi and Paul Kagame of Rwanda in Doha in mid-March.A peace agreement followed, inked by their foreign ministers in Washington at the end of Thursday, representatives from both countries as well as observers from the United States, Qatar and the African Union held their first meeting in Washington since signing the peace deal, according to a joint statement released by both nations on social 'discussed progress on implementing the agreement' among other things, it agreement was hailed as a significant milestone by the African Union and the United Nations and follows a long series of truces and ceasefires that have been systematically deal outlines provisions for the 'respect for territorial integrity and halting hostilities' in eastern DRC, which are still however to be also includes economic measures but has few to the Congolese government and the UN, the violence has left thousands dead and exacerbated a humanitarian crisis for hundreds of thousands of displaced February, the front has stabilized. But violence continued between the M23 and a motley group of pro-Kinshasa militias engaged in guerrilla a parallel Qatar-led process, the Rwandan-backed M23 armed group and Kinshasa also signed a declaration of principles in Qatar earlier this month, including a commitment to a permanent denies providing military support to the M23 but says its security has long been threatened by armed groups, including the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), established by ethnic Hutus linked to the massacres of Tutsis in the 1994 Rwanda DRC is the world's leading producer of cobalt and has deposits of gold and other valuable minerals including coltan, a metallic ore that is vital in making phones and said in April he had discussed a deal for access to the DRC's mineral wealth with US special envoy Massad July 17, the DRC government signed an agreement with US group Kobold Metals, which committed to investing in the digitization of geological data and the development of a lithium mine in southeast Congolese president then resolved to hold direct talks with the M23, having previously refused to do so, leading to the Doha agreement saw the government and M23 commit to a 'permanent ceasefire' and 'dialogue and negotiation' to facilitate the 'voluntary' return of refugees and displaced and the M23 gave themselves until July 29 to implement the declaration, with the deal setting an August 8 deadline for formal negotiations on a comprehensive peace accord, to be signed by August view the deadlines as tight, especialy as differences quickly emerged including over the issue of a withdrawal by the M23 from areas it has seized.


Arab News
17 hours ago
- Arab News
Israeli military says sirens sounded in Israeli communities near Gaza
GAZA: Warning sirens sounded in Israeli communities near the Gaza Strip, the Israeli military said on Friday..