Sudan's RSF Agrees with UN on Steps to Ease Aid Delivery

Sudanese farmers plow a field on the outskirts of Sudan's eastern city of Gedaref on July 18, 2024. (Photo by AFP)
Sudanese farmers plow a field on the outskirts of Sudan's eastern city of Gedaref on July 18, 2024. (Photo by AFP)
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Sudan's RSF Agrees with UN on Steps to Ease Aid Delivery

Sudanese farmers plow a field on the outskirts of Sudan's eastern city of Gedaref on July 18, 2024. (Photo by AFP)
Sudanese farmers plow a field on the outskirts of Sudan's eastern city of Gedaref on July 18, 2024. (Photo by AFP)

Sudan's Rapid Support Forces agreed with the United Nations on some steps to ease aid delivery in areas under its control, a member of the RSF told Reuters on Thursday.

The Sudanese army has not reached any understandings on aid delivers with the RSF, he added. It is unclear if these steps could be implemented without the army's participation.

Meanwhile, a key supply route into Sudan's Darfur region, deemed at risk of famine by a global monitor, has been cut off due to heavy rains, a World Food Program official told Reuters on Thursday.
The UN agency has described Sudan as the world's biggest hunger crisis, with the western Darfur region most at risk as Sudan's 15-month civil war that has displaced millions and sparked ethnic violence grinds on.
WFP's Country Director Eddie Rowe said thousands of tons of aid are stranded at the Tina crossing on the Chad border, prompting the body to reopen talks with the army-aligned government to open an alternative, all-weather crossing further south called Adre.
"You have these huge rivers. As I speak now, our convoy, which is supposed to move over 2000 metric tons is stranded," he told Reuters from Port Sudan. Asked on the status of the talks that resumed this week, he said: "It's 50/50.”
WFP is now seeking clearances to move a large 70-truck convoy via a little-used, over 1000 kilometer route from Port Sudan to Darfur which Rowe said will involve crossing the battle lines of both the Sudan Armed Forces, the Rapid Support Forces and various militias.
He added that this mostly desert route has worked in the past but outside of the rainy season and that the last journey took weeks and was "fraught with a lot of challenges.”
In a separate interview, Mona Rishmawi, a member of the UN Fact-Finding Mission on Sudan, told Reuters that she had met Darfur refugees in Chad who told her stories of escaping with virtually no water and eating grass along the route. "There's no doubt that people are starving," she said.



Türkiye Insists on Restoring Relations with Syria amid US Objection

Erdogan stressed that the situation in the region requires new foreign policy equations (Turkish Presidency)
Erdogan stressed that the situation in the region requires new foreign policy equations (Turkish Presidency)
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Türkiye Insists on Restoring Relations with Syria amid US Objection

Erdogan stressed that the situation in the region requires new foreign policy equations (Turkish Presidency)
Erdogan stressed that the situation in the region requires new foreign policy equations (Turkish Presidency)

Türkiye has conveyed new messages about maintaining efforts to restore normal ties with Syria, despite Damascus’ insistence on the Turkish military withdrawal, which currently seems to be far-fetched.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had intensified talk about this matter in recent weeks, ordering the fulfillment of the Syrian demand, and stressing that his country attaches great importance to increasing the number of its friends.
This came a day after Syrian President Bashar al-Assad announced that he would not oppose meeting with the Turkish president.
“In a period when our region is constantly on edge, establishing new equations in foreign policy is not just a choice but a necessity for Türkiye,” Erdogan said in his address after the Cabinet meeting on Tuesday evening.
He stressed that he could not allow anyone to confine Türkiye within “their narrow molds,” adding: “We neither turn our back on the East for the West nor neglect the West for the East.”
He continued: “We advance our relations with everyone, starting from our neighbors, in line with the interests of our country.”
Everyone must understand that increasing regional cooperation and solidarity will strengthen resilience against growing threats, the Turkish president underlined, adding: “Otherwise, we cannot prevent our region’s borders from being redrawn with bloodshed and tears as they were a century ago.”
He said that Türkiye sincerely hopes for the resolution of conflicts through mutual dialogue at the negotiation table.
In the same context, Turkish Defense Minister Yaşar Guler stressed that his country does not set its sights on anyone’s land or sovereign rights, and that Ankara’s battle is against terrorist organizations that harm peace and prosperity in the region.
During a meeting with the commanders of the armed forces, Guler said: “We are closely following developments in Syria, and I would like to remind you that the fate of Syria will be determined by its people, not those who rejoice in their sadness.”
Meanwhile, the United States announced that it does not support Türkiye’s efforts to normalize relations with Assad, stressing that these attempts will not yield results.
On Wednesday, Turkish media quoted a US State Department spokesman as saying that the United States’ position is clear and that it does not accept the normalization of ties with the Assad government without taking serious steps to find a political solution to the Syrian crisis.