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US, UN, UAE urge Sudan to respect humanitarian law after aid workers killed
US, UN, UAE urge Sudan to respect humanitarian law after aid workers killed

Al Arabiya

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Al Arabiya

US, UN, UAE urge Sudan to respect humanitarian law after aid workers killed

The United States, United Arab Emirates and other key players on Wednesday urged Sudan's warring sides to respect humanitarian law after five aid workers were killed in besieged al-Fasher. A joint statement — also including the United Nations, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the African Union and Switzerland — said the group 'urgently reiterates that international humanitarian law must be fully respected.' 'Attacks directed against civilians and civilian objects, including humanitarian personnel and assets, are serious violations of international humanitarian law,' said the statement issued by the US State Department. UN Secretary-General António Guterres had on Tuesday urged a probe into the attack on the convoy organized by the World Food Programme and UNICEF. The UN agencies did not specify who was behind the assault, which took place in an area controlled by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which has been at war with the regular army since April 2023. More than four million people have died in the war.

UN: Situation in West Darfur ‘Catastrophic'
UN: Situation in West Darfur ‘Catastrophic'

Asharq Al-Awsat

time12-05-2025

  • General
  • Asharq Al-Awsat

UN: Situation in West Darfur ‘Catastrophic'

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Sudan (OCHA) said on Sunday there is a 'massive' need for humanitarian assistance in North Darfur, adding that situation in the Zamzam and Abu Shouk displacement camps is catastrophic. 'Civilians are trapped. Aid cannot reach those who need it most,' the office said on its X account, adding that displaced people in the Tawila camp are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance. Meanwhile, Salwa Abdullah, a Darfur resident, told Asharq Al-Awsat on Sunday that she buried her five children in the Darfur desert, with no sign to locate their graves if she ever came back to visit them. 'How can I survive without them,' she said. Salwa dug their graves with the help of her father, during their journey from al-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, to the relatively safe town of Tawila. Speaking on the phone while crying, she said, 'I tried to get them to a safe area, away from shells and bullets. I didn't imagine they will die of thirst and then buried in a vast desert with no sign to mark their graves, only small sand hills that will disappear from wind and rain.' Salwa's oldest child was 13. She said she watched her five children struggle to death one by one, after they spent several days on the road to Tawila, located some 65 kilometers from al-Fasher, the last major city controlled by the Sudanese Army in the Darfur region, which has been besieged by the Rapid Support Forces for the past year. 'In just two days I lost two daughters and three sons, and shortly before, I lost my husband. I still ignore if he is alive or dead. Even if I find him how can I tell him that his five children are dead,' said Salwa, who is in her forties. 'I cried a lot hoping my tears will wake them up from their coma. I can't describe my feelings back then. I wished I was dead instead.' Salaw, who is pregnant, said the family left al-Fasher on foot carrying water bottles. 'But due to high temperatures during the daytime hours, the water ran out on the third day,' she explained. The grieved mother has now reached the Tawila town to join thousands of other families that were displaced from al-Fasher due to fighting between the Army and the RSF. 'Many families lost their children on their journey to Tawila, currently controlled by the Sudan Liberation Movement led by Abdul Wahid al Nur,' said Adam Rijal, spokesman for the General Coordination for Displaced Persons and Refugees. 'The displaced are living in dire humanitarian conditions and need basic necessities such as food, drinking water and shelter,' he said.

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