Sudan Requests Humanitarian Aid for Those Affected by the Ongoing Conflict

According to Sudan’s leadership, if foreign nations hadn’t provided rebels with help, a protracted war would have ended.

The government of Sudan has made a request to all nations and international organizations to support their country by delivering humanitarian aid into the nation engulfed in catastrophe.

The government also claimed that the long-running problem would have ended by now if certain nations hadn’t helped the rebel force, and it demanded that those nations cease funding the rebel group.

Speaking to the media in Abuja, Sudan’s Charge d’Affaires in Nigeria, Ahmed Jaboul, assured that his country would make sure that aid reached everyone in need. He also stated that Sudan will continue to place a high priority on humanitarian solutions to the current crisis because they are still necessary to put an end to the protracted conflict situation.

He went on to say that in order for the Sudanese government to engage in substantive political solution negotiations, this has become crucial.

The charge d’affaires bemoaned the fact that not only have the rebels not given up their weapons, but also that hostilities have been suspended across the majority of the nation by the National Military Forces, since the crisis started a year ago.

“We would like to focus on talking about the humanitarian solutions in Sudan nowadays,” stated Jaboul. This is one of the most important topics and a top priority for the international community as well as the government.

Since June 2023, there has been discussion about the future course of action. This was especially the case during the Geneva meeting that focused on the humanitarian crisis in Sudan. However, what we have been given in Sudan hardly makes up 10% of the pledge.

“The rebel forces have even invaded the humanitarian aid that we received in the central region of Sudan and stored in the central regions of the Sudanese states.”

He bemoaned the lack of action taken by the international community, particularly in terms of denouncing the rebel acts, to support humanitarian solutions arising from the current scenario.

He voiced alarm about the insurgents’ advances into the western and central regions of Sudan, which had resulted in the deaths of innocent people.


He lamented that the rebels would not stop invading every place they went, murdering innocent people, stealing anything they could find, and completely disrupting commercial operations.

“The Sudanese government is willing to have roundtable talks to negotiate settlement, as it did in Jedda in 2023,” he said, pointing out that at the end of last year’s negotiations, each party had made promises; the government fulfilled its end of the bargain, and those who hosted the peace talks made reference to it, but the rebels did not.

“We had decided that in order for us to offer solutions, the rebels needed to leave the homes of individuals, organizations, government buildings, and academic institutions and relocate to safe areas.

Regrettably, the rebel forces did not follow these, but things have since changed. With the exception of some areas of Dafur, which are still ruled by the rebels, the military is in charge of the capital and most of the central regions of Sudan.

He urged media outlets to play a crucial role in advancing humanitarian solutions, long-lasting peace, and political agreements by promoting accuracy in news reports on the Sudanese crisis.

In addition to calling for humanitarian aid, he urged the international community to force the rebel’s sponsors to halt their activities, saying that the Sudanese government was prepared to let the donors deliver supplies to the impacted individuals directly in Sudan.

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