UN food agency pauses Sudan aid to 800,000 people as fighting spreads

Decision taken after clashes and air strikes engulfed Wad Madani city which Red Cross says is ‘turning into another death trap’ for civilians

People gather outside a passport office in the Sudanese city of Gedaref as they attempt to get passports and exit visas after fleeing Wad Madani, the capital of al-Jazirah state. Photograph: AFP via Getty
People gather outside a passport office in the Sudanese city of Gedaref as they attempt to get passports and exit visas after fleeing Wad Madani, the capital of al-Jazirah state. Photograph: AFP via Getty

The United Nations World Food Programme has temporarily suspended assistance in some parts of Sudan’s Al-Jazirah state, where it was supporting more than 800,000 people, as fighting spreads.

About 300,000 people have fled Al-Jazirah since December 15th, when clashes erupted, the WFP said in an emailed statement.

“Ongoing fighting makes it extremely challenging for humanitarian agencies to safely deliver assistance, especially with more and more people on the move, fleeing for their lives,” it said.

The decision was taken after clashes and air strikes engulfed locations around Wad Madani city over the course of the past week, with the US urging the Rapid Support Forces militia that’s battling Sudan’s army to halt its attack.

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The army has now withdrawn from the city and launched an investigation into why the RSF was allowed to take the territory following the removal of troops. The UN on Thursday said people displaced from Wad Madani have fled to the Gedaref, Sennar and White Nile states.

The eruption of a new front in central Sudan also threatens to derail fragile international efforts to broker a new ceasefire in a conflict that has killed more than 12,000 people and forced 6.7 million from their homes.

The International Committee of the Red Cross on Thursday said it had withdrawn from Wad Madani as the location was “turning into another death trap” for civilians.

In just three months, the ICRC and the Sudanese Red Crescent Society have facilitated almost 9,500 phone calls for people who lost contact with their loved ones.

The US has accused both sides of committing war crimes in the conflict that has devolved into proxy war with Egypt and Iran holding close ties to the Sudanese Armed Forces and the United Arab Emirates backing the RSF.

The UAE denies supplying the RSF with weapons. – Bloomberg