Egypt’s Chief of Staff Inspects Security Forces in Sinai

Egyptian Chief of Staff Mohamed Farid tours Sinai on Tuesday. (Egypt military spokesman)
Egyptian Chief of Staff Mohamed Farid tours Sinai on Tuesday. (Egypt military spokesman)
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Egypt’s Chief of Staff Inspects Security Forces in Sinai

Egyptian Chief of Staff Mohamed Farid tours Sinai on Tuesday. (Egypt military spokesman)
Egyptian Chief of Staff Mohamed Farid tours Sinai on Tuesday. (Egypt military spokesman)

Egyptian Chief of Staff Mohamed Farid inspected Tuesday military and police troops deployed in North Sinai to get firsthand information about the security situation there.

He carried out the visit a week after Egypt inaugurated a fifth tunnel linking Sinai to the mainland.

Farid also inspected the living and administrative conditions of the armed forces and police units, an official Egyptian statement said.

“The Lieutenant-General made an inspection tour that included visiting a number of national projects that the armed forces are supervising and a number of government institutions and facilities,” it added.

He met with several families and citizens who praised the armed forces on their great efforts to restore security and safety.

Later, Farid met with some executive and security leaders of the North Sinai governorate and visited the permanent operations center in the North Sinai to follow up on the progress of security operations.

Last week, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi inaugurated the Ahmed Hamadi II tunnel constructed beneath the Suez Canal, and the fifth of a series of tunnels that were established in the past six years in Egypt to connect the Sinai and Nile Delta.



Civilian Groups Demand Int’l Intervention to Stop Violations in Sudan

Smoke billows from fighting in Khartoum, Sudan. (AFP file)
Smoke billows from fighting in Khartoum, Sudan. (AFP file)
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Civilian Groups Demand Int’l Intervention to Stop Violations in Sudan

Smoke billows from fighting in Khartoum, Sudan. (AFP file)
Smoke billows from fighting in Khartoum, Sudan. (AFP file)

The Sudanese Coordination of Civil Democratic Forces (Tagadum) condemned on Tuesday the army’s series of strikes on a number of regions in the country that left nearly 500 people dead.

The military carried out raids on the central city of al-Hasaheisa in the al-Jazirah state, Hamra al-Sheikh in North Kordofan, and Kutum and Mellit in North Darfur. Meanwhile, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) fired artillery at the army-held region of al-Hatana in Omdurman.

The Emergency Lawyers group said around 100 people, including women and children, were killed in the army raids on al-Hasaheisa.

It strongly condemned the strikes on al-Jazirah, Sennar, White Nile, West and North Darfur and North Kordofan, deeming the continued attacks a war crime and flagrant violation of international humanitarian law.

It called on the international community to intervene immediately to stop the violations, save civilian lives and pressure the army to stop targeting markets and other civilian areas.

The army says it is targeting RSF locations. The RSF, meanwhile, says it is using artillery to attack army units. However, witnesses and videos shot by the people, contradict the claims, with the recordings showing the corpse of women, children and the elderly in areas that are being targeted by the warring parties.

The National Umma Party, one of Sudan’s largest parties, slammed in a statement on Tuesday the “horrific” violations in the war, demanding the army and RSF to fulfill their past commitments – a reference to the Jeddah Humanitarian Declaration signed in May 2023 through Saudi and American mediation.

Tagadum regretted that the warring parties continue to target civilians, calling on them to “seriously and sincerely” return to negotiations to end the war and suffering of the people.