Sudan, Trump
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Join Georja Calvin-Smith for a roundup of stories from across the continent. This week: the UN's humanitarian chief's visit to the devastated Sudanese region of Darfur leaves him in shock over
Yale researcher says Sudan’s RSF is digging mass graves in el-Fasher to hide a massacre after taking control of North Darfur’s capital.
South Sudan has resumed transporting and exporting crude oil after drone attacks on two key oil installations in neighboring Sudan forced an emergency shutdown, a senior official said Wednesday
Marco Rubio has called for urgent global action to cut off weapons to Sudan’s RSF, citing systematic atrocities
The war has caused ethnically-charged bloodletting, widespread destruction and mass displacement, drawing in foreign powers and threatening to split Sudan.
Ahmed arrived in the camp two months before el-Fasher in West Darfur was seized by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, or RSF, which have been battling Sudan’s army for more than two years. The U.N. population agency estimates over 2,000 women have fled the city to escape the harrowing fighting.
South Sudan's President Salva Kiir has sacked his Second Vice-President Dr Benjamin Bol Mel, who was seen as a possible successor. So with First Vice-President Riek Machar under house arrest charged with treason, how will this latest move by the president affect political stability in the country?
Tuggar To Piers Morgan: Faith-Based Agitations Risk Plunging Nigeria Into Sudan-Style Disintegration
Foreign Minister Yusuf Tuggar warns on Piers Morgan’s show that faith-based agitations risk pushing Nigeria toward Sudan-style disintegration.
U.N. humanitarian affairs and relief head Tom Fletcher has told The Associated Press that the situation is getting “horrific for civilians” in Sudan.