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Sudan main civil alliance welcomes humanutarian truce in al-Fashir

Sudan main civil alliance welcomes humanutarian truce in al-Fashir

Al Taghyeer29-06-2025
The Civil Democratic Alliance of the Forces of the Revolution 'Sumud' welcomed the UN Secretary-General initiative to declare a one week humanitarian truce in al-Fashir, capital of North Darfur state.
Khartoum: Altaghyeer
The Civil Democratic Alliance of the Forces of the Revolution 'Sumud' has welcomed the initiative of the UN Secretary-General to declare a weeklong humanitarian truce in al-Fashir, capital of North Darfur state, aimed to help deliver humanitarian aid to besieged citizens.
The alliance, led by former prime minister Abdalla Hamdok, expressed hope that the other party to the conflict in Sudan, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), would follow the case of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) which accepted the proposal.
The RSF has been beseiging al-Fashir, the only major city in Darfur still under SAF, for more than a year.
Sumud urged for the implementation of this truce and expanding it to cover the whole country where people are negatively impacted by the ongoing conflict.
The alliance also called for ensuring the delivery of humanitarian assistance to those in need, opening all crossings for the delivery of aid and protecting humanitarian workers.
The alliance affirmed that the proposed truce clearly shows that peaceful, negotiated solutions are the shortest path to alleviating the suffering of the Sudanese people.
Sumud stressed that it is the people who are paying the high price of this ongoing war with their lives, security, and livelihoods emphasizing that there is no military solution to the conflict.
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Sudan main civil alliance welcomes humanutarian truce in al-Fashir
Sudan main civil alliance welcomes humanutarian truce in al-Fashir

Al Taghyeer

time29-06-2025

  • Al Taghyeer

Sudan main civil alliance welcomes humanutarian truce in al-Fashir

The Civil Democratic Alliance of the Forces of the Revolution 'Sumud' welcomed the UN Secretary-General initiative to declare a one week humanitarian truce in al-Fashir, capital of North Darfur state. Khartoum: Altaghyeer The Civil Democratic Alliance of the Forces of the Revolution 'Sumud' has welcomed the initiative of the UN Secretary-General to declare a weeklong humanitarian truce in al-Fashir, capital of North Darfur state, aimed to help deliver humanitarian aid to besieged citizens. The alliance, led by former prime minister Abdalla Hamdok, expressed hope that the other party to the conflict in Sudan, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), would follow the case of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) which accepted the proposal. The RSF has been beseiging al-Fashir, the only major city in Darfur still under SAF, for more than a year. Sumud urged for the implementation of this truce and expanding it to cover the whole country where people are negatively impacted by the ongoing conflict. The alliance also called for ensuring the delivery of humanitarian assistance to those in need, opening all crossings for the delivery of aid and protecting humanitarian workers. The alliance affirmed that the proposed truce clearly shows that peaceful, negotiated solutions are the shortest path to alleviating the suffering of the Sudanese people. Sumud stressed that it is the people who are paying the high price of this ongoing war with their lives, security, and livelihoods emphasizing that there is no military solution to the conflict.

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War Economy in Sudan A Reading of the World Bank Report (May 2025)and the Post-War Challenges By Omer Sidahmed Sudan on the Brink: Economy in the Grip of War and the Long Road to Recovery Introduction: A War That Destroyed Everything Two years after war broke out in April 2023, Sudan stands at the edge of an unprecedented humanitarian and economic catastrophe. Over 61,000 people killed in Khartoum alone, and 12.9 million displaced — the worst displacement crisis globally. The war hasn't only displaced people — it has displaced the state itself: services halted, institutions collapsed, and the economy disintegrated. The new World Bank report paints a bleak picture — but also proposes a roadmap to recovery, provided the war ends and a national reform project begins. This article reviews the key findings of the report and offers a critical reading based on Sudan's complex political-economic reality. 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Social Justice and Peacebuilding National reconciliation, truth commissions, reintegration of the displaced. Reform education and health systems, and expand social safety nets. Demine war zones and create safe environments for people and economic activity. Critique: A Technocratic Vision Detached from War Economics Isolated Indicators While the report details GDP contraction, inflation, unemployment, and currency collapse, it treats them as though they result from a natural disaster or external shock — ignoring war-related financing mechanisms and the actors driving the conflict. The informal war economy — the real foundation of Sudan's current economy — is entirely absent. So too are illicit financial flows that fund militias, gold smuggling, and parallel foreign exchange networks. There's no analysis of how state institutions were captured by military elites and militias, transforming public assets into fuel for war. 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Agriculture can be the cornerstone — but not the foundation alone. True recovery requires comprehensive political, institutional, and economic reform to move Sudan from extraction to production, from looting to justice, and from exclusion to inclusive governance. June 2025

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