EMMA STONE WANTS TO BE CALLED BY HER REAL NAME EMILY name, Emily

EMMA STONE WANTS TO BE CALLED BY HER REAL NAME EMI...

Photo Credit: Getty Images Emma Stone recently opened up about the stage name she adopted for her acting career and her preferance to use her r...

MADONNA'S FAMILY FUELS "CELEBRATION" TOUR

MADONNA'S FAMILY FUELS "CELEBRATION" TOUR

Photo Credit: Getty Images The post is a heartfelt tribute, filled with photos showcasing both on-stage moments and behind-the-scenes glimpses ...

TIKTOK FIRMLY STANDS AGAINST SALE AMID US BAN THREATS

TIKTOK FIRMLY STANDS AGAINST SALE AMID US BAN THRE...

Photo Credit: TikTok’s Chinese company, Byte Dance, said on Thursday that the social media platform has no intention of being sold. This is the fir...

EMINEM OFFICIALLY ANNOUNCES RELEASE OF NEW ALBUM THIS SUMMER ‘ THE DEATH OF SLIM SHADY ‘

EMINEM OFFICIALLY ANNOUNCES RELEASE OF NEW ALBUM T...

Photo Credit: Filmmagic Shortly after making an appearance at the NFL draft, Eminem announced that his twelfth studio album, “The Death of Slim Sha...

KELLY OSBOURNE ATTRIBUTES HER SHOOTING INCIDENT BY BROTHER TO A NEAR DEATH EXPERIENCE

KELLY OSBOURNE ATTRIBUTES HER SHOOTING INCIDENT BY...

Photo Credit: File Photo Kelly Osbourne is attributing a near-death experience, or at least a highly traumatic one, to her brother Jack Osbourne. ...

KIM KARDASHIAN MAKES A RETURN TO THE WHITE HOUSE

KIM KARDASHIAN MAKES A RETURN TO THE WHITE HOUSE

Photo Credit: Getty Images More than four years after her initial visit to meet then-President Donald Trump, Kim Kardashian returned to the White ...

FILM THAT THREATENS BARBIE AT BOX OFFICE IN ITALY, ‘ THERE’S STILL TOMORROW ’

FILM THAT THREATENS BARBIE AT BOX OFFICE IN ITALY,...

Photo Credit: Filmitalia Barbie, directed by Greta Gerwig, may have been the most successful movie ever to be directed by a female filmmaker and th...

MR FOX ORDERED TO PAY £90,000 TO 'PEDOPHILES’

MR FOX ORDERED TO PAY £90,000 TO 'PEDOPHILES’

Photo Credit: Getty Images Simon Blake and drag artist Crystal, a former contestant of RuPaul's Drag Race whose real name is Colin Seymour, have su...

RYAN SEACREST AND AUDREY PAIGE PART WAYS

RYAN SEACREST AND AUDREY PAIGE PART WAYS

Photo Credit: Ryan Seacrest/Instagram In a surprising turn of events, the entertainment world was abuzz with the news of Ryan Seacrest and Aubrey P...

ENTERTAINMENT

26-04-2024

EMMA STONE WANTS TO BE CALLED BY HER REA…

Photo Credit: Getty Images Emma Stone recently opened up about the stage name she adopted for her acting career and her preferance to use her real na...

Read more

BUSINESS

26-04-2024 By Super User

MICROSOFT'S QUARTELY PROFITS SOAR BY 20%…

Photo Credit: File Photo   In a remarkable display of growth and innovation, Microsoft has reported a 20% increase in quarterly profits, a testam...

Read more

LIFESTYLE

26-04-2024 By CHRISTINE AMANDA

MICHELLE KEEGAN UNVEILS NEW VERY RANGE: …

Photo Credit: ITV Michelle Keegan, renowned for her acting prowess in "Fool Me Once" has once again captured the spotlight, this time with the launch of ...

Read more

WORLD NEWS

26-04-2024 By LEWIS MUSONYE

BABY RESCUED FROM DYING MOTHER'S WOMB IN…

Photo Credit: Mohammad Jahjouh After an Israeli air strike in southern Gaza, a baby was rescued from her dying mother's womb. Sadly the baby has died. Ba...

Read more

TECH

26-04-2024 By DAVID KYAMA

AI GENERATED WOMEN TO HAVE A BEAUTY CONT…

Photo Credit: File Photo The world’s first artificial intelligence beauty contest has been launched by the Fanvue World of AI Creator Awards (WAICAs), wi...

Read more

16 20 660x330

Photo Credit: AP

At least 250,000 refugees have crossed into countries neighbouring Sudan since April 15, after a rivalry between army general Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the head of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, Mohamed Hamdan “Hemedti” Dagalo, turned into an armed conflict.

Another 843,000 people are displaced internally, the United Nations refugee agency said, bringing the total number of people fleeing their homes over the past six weeks to more than one million.

 

While most of the worst fighting has taken place in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, fierce battles also took place in the country’s western region of Darfur, mostly between Arab and Masalit communities. Waves of intercommunal violence have forced at least 60,000 refugees so far to flee into neighbouring Chad.

Aid agencies say the numbers are much higher as people keep streaming every day into the country, and thousands have not been registered so far.

Most of the refugees are in informal settlements along the border and remain at risk from the fighting if they are not moved deeper into the country before the rainy season starts in about four weeks.

The UN’s refugee agency UNHCR started to relocate about 1,000 people on Monday amid huge logistical challenges and a shortage of funds.

Resources in Chad were already stretched to assist about 600,000 refugees already in the country before the Sudan crisis.

Al Jazeera spoke to Samantha Power, the chief of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), who has announced $100m in additional funding to Sudan and countries affected by the conflict in Sudan.

“Since humanitarian conditions are only getting worse, not better inside Sudan, we at USAID are increasing our support to our partners on the ground,” Power said, as she visited one of the camps in eastern Chad hosting refugees from Sudan.

Al Jazeera: What is the United States doing to help the displaced Sudanese people?

Samantha Power: The number one thing that the US is focused on is bringing the two parties to the negotiating table so that the fighting that is driving people into these conditions stops. That is something that Secretary of State Antony Blinken is working on along with the Saudis, the African Union and others.

In the meantime, since humanitarian conditions are only getting worse inside Sudan, we at USAID are increasing our support to our partners on the ground.

Even before this crisis and horrific violence, you had 16 million people in Sudan who were in need of humanitarian assistance. That number has now gone up by more than 50 percent. That means finding a way to funnel in more resources into Sudan to meet food and protection needs.

So many women are now suffering gender-based violence at the hands of the militia and soldiers. So more health items are needed, given the fact that hospitals have been either destroyed or taken over by soldiers.

Here in Chad, [we’re involved in] the process of moving people from impromptu settlements deeper into the country where they won’t be pursued by the very same Sudanese armed actors that drove them to flee in the first place.

We, the United States will support UNHCR building these camps for what is now 60,000 people and will support the [refugee agency] as they move these people away from the border, deeper into Chad. But we all recognise that 60,000 is only the beginning and we are already hearing reports of thousands – maybe tens of thousands of people – who are inside Sudan trying to cross the border.

The Chadian forces and authorities are welcoming them but you have Sudanese armed elements seeking to take advantage of people in the hours of their greatest need, either forcing them to pay [to cross] or blocking them outright. So obviously, that would be part of our diplomacy as well. Those forces who have unleashed this war on civilians need to take responsibility for clearing the border, so that people who want to cross, can cross.

AJ: How do you respond to criticism that the US has been too appeasing towards the two generals, hence paving the way to this conflict?

Power: I travelled to Sudan two years ago and engaged, as so many US senior officials did, with General Burhan to press for the expeditious transition to civilian rule. USAID threw its weight behind the civilian-led government with development [and] significant financial support.

It was the most we have invested in Sudan in a very long time, knowing that people needed to see tangible economic progress with civilian-led rule. When Burhan staged the coup we cut off that assistance and have imposed constant pressure on him to return to the negotiating table. Obviously, that progress was halted because there are certain individuals and elements inside Sudan who, decade after decade, put their own welfare above the welfare of the Sudanese people.

I think the focus and the blame and the accountability belong on armed elements who again put their own interests first.

AJ: Can you comment on how the Sudanese feel betrayed by the US and the West?

Power: We are ramping up support and announcing $100m in additional programming today both here and in Sudan to try to stand with the Sudanese people. That’s why we are relentless in our diplomacy and continue to be.

The only future that will work for Sudan is a civilian-led rule, and we won’t give up until the Sudanese people achieve that.

Only registered members can post comments.

HEADLINES

SPORTS HEADLINES

REGISTER TO RECEIVE DAILY BREAKING NEWS

Please enable the javascript to submit this form

RECENT NEWS

AROUND THE CITIES