London’s “Road to Peace” defeat against Sudan
Sudan, chaired by British Foreign Secretary David Lammy, will hold a high-level international conference in London to find Sudan’s “path of peace”.
The civil war in Sudan began exactly two years ago, leading to what aid agencies call the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.
The UK promises an additional $120 million (£91 million) in food and medical assistance.
The charity says there are 30 million people, many facing hunger, and urgently need humanitarian assistance.
More than 12 million people have been forced to be killed in reports of rape and ethnic cleansing.
In recent days, the Rapid Support Force (RSF) has launched strong ground and air attacks on displaced persons near the city of El-Fasher in an attempt to capture the last state capital of its rival Sudanese army held in Darfur.
Zamzam provides temporary shelter for an estimated 500,000 people and is currently systematically destroying the intent to arson attacks of RSF troops, the Humanitarian Research Laboratory at Yale School of Public Health said.
The RSF has not commented on the allegation.
Tuesday’s ministerial meeting was co-chaired by the UK, the EU and the African Union.
The aim is to unite international partners on a common standpoint, integrate more food and medicine into Sudan and find what Latin America calls a “path of peace.”
Main wars in Sudan – neither the Sudanese armed forces nor the RSF were invited.
They will be represented by regional allies, some of whom diplomats say are intensifying the conflict. Among them is the United Arab Emirates (UAE), accused of arming the RSF, which is denied.
War – The Power Fight between the Army and the RSF – began on April 15, 2023, after the Army and RSF leaders were in trouble due to the country’s political future.
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