Showing posts with label Sudan civil war. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sudan civil war. Show all posts

Monday, May 29, 2023

Sudan Civil War News Updates -- May 29, 2023

 

France 24: Fighting rages in Sudan ahead of truce expiration 

Gunshots and artillery fire rocked the Sudanese capital Monday, the last day of a frequently breached ceasefire, as calls to arms stoked fears the six-week war will intensify. 

Residents told AFP they could hear street battles in northern Khartoum, as well as artillery fire in the south of the capital of over five million people which has been turned into a deadly war zone. 

Since the truce began a week ago, frightened residents have ventured out to try and get food or water, the costs of which have doubled since the start of the war. 

But thousands of families continue to shelter in place, rationing water and electricity while trying desperately to avoid stray gunfire.

In Darfur, on the western border with Chad, continued fighting "blatantly disregards ceasefire commitments", according to Toby Harward, of the United Nations refugee agency. 

Read more .... 

Sudan Civil War News Updates -- May 29, 2023  

Saudi Arabia, US say Sudan factions posturing for escalation -- Reuters  

US, Saudi Arabia call for Sudan cease-fire to be extended -- The Hill  

Sudan crisis: Darfur governor issues call to arms -- DW  

Sudan Darfur crisis: 'Everything civilians can use has been burned or destroyed' -- BBC 

Nearly 1.4 million people displaced in Sudan since civil war erupted, UN report says -- CNN  

U.N. warns more than one million may flee Sudan bloodshed -- Reuters  

The World is at Risk as War in Sudan Threatens to Spread, U.N. Forces Warn -- Newsweek

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Sudan Steps Up The Use Of Parachute Bombs Against It's Own People

A Sudanese fighter jet deploying parachuted bombs in the Nuba Mountain region. (NubaReports.org)

Silent Death From Above: Sudan Steps Up Use Of Parachute Bombs On People -- FOX News

The people of war-torn Sudan learned long ago to take cover when planes roared overhead, but the latest tactic being used on them -- parachute bombs -- is raining silent death down on innocent villagers, say alarmed activists.

The country’s extremist Islamic regime in Khartoum has stepped up the practice in the Nuba Mountains, dropping deadly bombs by parachute from high altitudes as president and accused international war criminal Omar al-Bashir seeks to rout rebel forces opposed to his brand of radical Islam.

In recent years, the Nuba Mountains, where Christians and Muslims live side by side, have become a battleground for the forces of al-Bashir's forces and the Sudanese People Liberation Army.

Read more ....

My Comment: The world is focus on South Sudan, Central African Republic, Somalia, Mali, Congo, and at other troubled spots in Africa. But the slaughter that is occurring in tge Nuba mountains of Sudan is just as horrific as all the rest.

Friday, February 7, 2014

The Bloodshed Continues In The Blue Nile, South Kordofan, And Darfur.

BBC

South Sudan Crisis Hides 'Forgotten Wars' In East Africa -- Rebecca Simpson, Christian Science Monitor

New report details ongoing and unremarked conflict in Blue Nile, South Kordofan, and Darfur.

Since December, international attention and focus has shifted to South Sudan as violence and a rising humanitarian crisis intensifies in the world’s newest nation.

Yet in the north, in Sudan itself, escalating violence, displacement, and new political developments in the areas along the nation's periphery -- Darfur, South Kordofan, and Blue Nile -- are going largely unnoticed.

The numbers of casualties and displacements in these areas are at their highest levels in years and continue to grow.

Read more ....

My Comment: It is true that the world's focus is on South Sudan .... while ignoring the even more bloodier conflicts in the Blue Nile, South Kordofan, and Darfur.

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Sudan's Civil War Is Spreading

Sudan City Stormed By Darfur Rebels -- Al Jazeera

Rebel fighters seeking to topple president storm Um Rawaba and say they are heading to Khartoum.

Rebels from Sudan's Darfur region have attacked a city in a neighbouring state, taking their fight closer to Khartoum.

Fighters stormed Um Rawaba, in North Kordofan state, about 500km south of the capital, but denied accusations of pillaging.

Al Jazeera's Harriet Martin, reporting from Khartoum, said witnesses reported seeing rebels looting a market and several banks during the attack on Saturday.

Martin said the attack comes in the wake of increased fighting in South Darfur over the past few weeks, which has displaced thousands of people.

Read more ....

More News On Sudan's Civil War

Sudan Rebels Expand Offensive -- Voice of America
Sudanese rebels widen offensive -- SKY News
Sudanese rebels launch attack southwest of Khartoum -- Deutsche Welle
Sudan rebels attack city, push closer to capital -- Reuters
Rebels From Darfur Stage Attack in Neighboring State -- New York Times
Fear and anger follow Sudanese rebel strike -- Global Post/AFP
Sudanese protesters stone government convoy after rebel attack -- Reuters

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Major Clashes Reported Between Sudan's Army And Rebels


'Dozens Killed' As Sudan's Army And Rebels Clash -- BBC

Sudan's army and rebels say they have clashed on two fronts, reportedly leaving dozens of people dead.

The army says it killed 32 insurgents who attacked a village in the western Darfur region. The rebels claim they drove government troops out.

Separately, Khartoum says 45 rebels were killed in a village in South Kordofan, near South Sudan's border.

The Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) rebels said they liberated the village, killing at least one soldier.

Read more ....

Update #1:
Dozens killed in clashes between Sudan army and rebels -- Reuters
Update #2: Sudan army, rebels clash on two fronts -- The Star

My Comment:
In addition to these conflicts, the US in now warning of new Sudan-South Sudan conflicts over their disputed border.

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Sudan Moving Heavy Numbers of Troops To Contested Region

Images Show 'Massive' Troop Build-Up in Sudan -- Voice of America

New satellite images appear to show thousands of Sudanese government troops marching toward a rebel stronghold in a contested region near South Sudan.

The Satellite Sentinel Project and the Enough Project released the images Friday, saying at least 3,000 troops appear to be marching on Kurmuk in Blue Nile State. The U.S.-based monitoring group says the forces include heavy armor, artillery, tanks and helicopter gunships.

Read more ....

More News On Sudan's Conflicts In The South

Sudan deploys troops, tanks in border state: group -- Reuters
Sudan 'set for major attack' in Blue Nile -- AFP
Sudan set for major attack in Blue Nile -- News 24
In Sudan, 3,000 Troops, Heavy Armor, Choppers Headed South -- Time
Sudan Army, Opposition Fighters Clash in Southern Kordofan -- Bloomberg
Heavy fighting across Sudan conflict state, 'dozens killed' -- AFP
Sudan prepares to attack SPLM-N’s stronghold positions in Blue Nile - group -- Sudan Tribune
The forgotten slaughter in Sudan -- Michael Weiss, The Telegraph

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Another Civil War In Sudan?

Fighting Spreads As Sudan Faces More Civil War -- McClatchy News

NAIROBI, Kenya — Fighting in Sudan spread to a new hot-spot region Friday, raising concerns that the end of one bloody Sudanese civil war might merely usher in a new one after a decade of international diplomacy helped split the country into two nations earlier this year.

Clashes erupted after midnight early Friday in Sudan's Blue Nile state, as government forces quickly expelled from its capital city forces loyal to Gov. Malik Agar, who heads the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North opposition party.

Read more ....

More News On Sudan's New Civil War

Sudan's Conflict Spreads: Is This the Start of a New Civil War? -- Time
Renewed fighting, refugees in south of Sudan -- Reuters
Blue Nile: Sudan declares state of emergency -- BBC
Sudan Attacks Disputed Border State -- New York Times
UN refugee agency: Thousands reported fleeing into Ethiopia amid Sudan clashes -- Washington Post
UNHCR Calls for Immediate Stop to Fighting in Blue Nile State -- Voice of America
Thousands Flee Unrest in Sudan's Blue Nile State -- Voice of America
Sudan's embattled opposition vows resistance -- AFP
Sudanese Armed Forces Clash With Opposition Fighters in Blue Nile Province -- Bloomberg
Sudanese Army, Rebels Clash in Southern Kordofan, Suna New Agency Reports -- Bloomberg
Blue Nile State Conflict Could Have Multiple Effects -- Voice of America

Monday, August 3, 2009

Battles Break Out In Darfur And The South Of Sudan


Official: 185 Killed In Sudan Tribal Violence -- AP

CAIRO — A local south Sudanese official says gunmen have attacked a group of displaced people camping near a river close to the Ethiopian border, killing 185 of them.

The official, reached by telephone, says more than half of the victims of Sunday's attack were women and children.

A flare-up of tribal clashes over cattle and territory in south Sudan has left some 1,000 people killed this year.

Read more ....

More News On Sudan's Civil Wars

Scores killed in South Sudan clashes -- The Guardian
Officials: Tribal Clash Kills 160 in Southern Sudan -- Voice of America
South Sudan ethnic clashes kill 160: local official -- AFP
More than 160 killed in South Sudan tribal raid -- Reuters
Scores dead in South Sudan clash -- BBC
UN extends aid to victims of deadly new violence in southern Sudan -- UN News Centre
Darfur rebels, army clash in Sudan oil region -- Reuters
Darfur network decries US Gration’s approach with Sudan -- Sudan Tribune
Understanding Darfur’s Saviours and Survivors -- Sudan Tribune
U.N. council extends mandate of Darfur peacekeepers -- Washington Post

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Sudan On The Brink

Rebels in Sudan

FEATURE-Deadly oil town dispute festers in Sudan -- Reuters
AGOK, Sudan, June 17 (Reuters) - A thatched roof propped up by sticks provides the only shelter from driving rain for Sudanese mother Akur Chol Akur and her three young sons, displaced by fighting in Sudan's oil-producing Abyei region.

Akur is among tens of thousands who fled homes near Abyei in May when clashes broke out between northern government forces and former southern rebels, raising fears that Africa's biggest country could be sliding back into north-south civil war.

"We started to run at about noon, we ran all that night and the next day," Akur said. "I have nothing," she added, showing a dirty plastic bag that held all her belongings.

The fate of the Abyei displaced, estimated by the United Nations at around 50,000, is tied to the success of a "road map" to ending tensions and planned international arbitration over longstanding disputes like boundaries.

Read more ....

News on Sudan From Other Sources
Dozens found dead in disputed Sudan oil area -- ABC Australia
Chad Rebels Move; Government Accuses Sudan and Peacekeepers -- Voice Of America
Chad town 'under attack by Sudan' -- BBC News
Chad accuses Sudan of attack, Khartoum denies -- Reuters
Chad accuses Sudan of helping rebels attack army garrison -- International Herald Tribune
U.N. officials condemn rebel attacks in Chad -- MSNBC
Darfur rebels face terrorism trial for attack -- MSNBC
UN criticizes Sudan over war crimes suspects -- Washington Post
Opinion: The Genocide Continues -- New York Times
Opinion: Khartoum's genocidal despot -- Washington Times
Opinion: Sudan On the Brink -- Frontpage

My Comment: The Sudanese government is fighting against everyone. They cannot win against their opponents, but unfortunately this fight will continue for a longtime before they will recognize that they cannot win.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Sudanese Leaders To Face War Crimes Charges Over Killings In Darfur

From the Times Online:

Top Sudanese officials will soon face war crimes charges after the international prosecutor declared the “whole state apparatus” responsible for a campaign of rape and pillage in Darfur.

In a strongly worded speech, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, the chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Court in the Hague, told the UN Security Council yesterday he would publicly name the alleged perpetrators when he seeks arrest warrants next month.

“The evidence shows that the commission of such crimes on such a scale, over a period of five years, and throughout Darfur, has required the sustained mobilisation of the entire Sudanese state apparatus,” he said.

Read more ....

News On Sudan From Other Sources:
Sudanese minister Ahmad Harun accused of war crimes -- Telegraph
All of Darfur 'a crime scene,' UN Security Council is told -- International Herald Tribune
Sudan accused of Darfur cover up -- CNN
Pressure grows for Darfur war crime suspects -- AFP
Sudan bars U.S. firms from Darfur contracts -- MSNBC

My Comment: The court in The Hague is starting to show that it will not be selective in who they will pursue for war crimes. This action is late ..... but thankfully it is now going in the right direction. The wars and ethnic cleansing in Darfur will continue, but the men who propagate this crime now know that there will be a day in which they will be held accountable for their actions.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

South Sudanese Accuse Khartoum Of Sending Troops

From Yahoo News:

JUBA, Sudan (Reuters) - South Sudanese officials accused the government on Tuesday of reinforcing troops in the disputed oil town of Abyei, raising tensions as U.N. Security Council envoys flew in to shore up a north-south peace deal.

Clashes in Abyei last month increased fears of a return to all out war between the northern government and the south, which signed a peace agreement in 2005 to end two decades of civil war.

The Security Council envoys, who flew into the southern capital Juba on a tour of African hotspots, will discuss Abyei with both sides.

At stake in Abyei is control of lucrative oilfields and a pipeline supplying about half Sudan's daily 500,000 barrel output. Three years after the peace accord, the sides have failed to agree on the borders or administration for the area.

Read more ....

News From Other Sources:
UN Security Council worried Abyei fighting could reignite Sudan civil war -- Jerusalem Post
Arab nations 'failing' Sudan -- Al Jazeera
Visiting UN mission in bid to ease Sudan tensions -- AFP

My Comment: The Sudanese Government is positioning itself to consolidate its position in this oil producing region. Expect heavy fighting in this region to start in the next few weeks. As for the U.N., their efforts will be ignored.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Sudanese Soldiers Battle Former Southern Rebels -- Analysis And Review On Africa's First Oil War

From Yahoo News:

KHARTOUM, Sudan - Sudanese soldiers battled former southern rebels Tuesday in the oil-rich region of Abyei despite a five-day cease-fire, U.N. and Sudanese officials said.

Abyei lies just north of the disputed boundary line between north and south Sudan and remains contested despite a 2005 peace accord that ended a 21-year civil war, which left an estimated 2 million people dead.

The United Nations has pulled most of its civilian staff from the town of Abyei, although some 400 U.N. peacekeepers remained.

Many of the south's former rebel leaders come from Abyei and frequently vow to reclaim the area, but the northern government is reluctant to let it go because of its oil fields.

Read more ....

Other News Reports:

Fighting Resumes In Sudan -- The Times (South Africa)
Is Sudan Collapsing Into War at Abyei? -- New York Times
After the JEM's attack, the south could slip away from Sudan -- Political Risk
Deadly fighting rages in Sudan flashpoint -- Pakistan Chronicle
“sounding the alarm on Abyei” -- ngKilloren
Sudan: "bloodbath" in Abeyi; US talks on hold -- WW4 Report
Heavy fighting renewed in southern Sudan -- Arabic Video News In English
China's Involvement In Sudan: Arms And Oil -- Human Rights Watch
Sudan: A history lesson -- Rosemary Thoughts

My Comment: The war between the mainly Arab north of the country and the non-Arab South of the country resulted in decades of war and over 2 million dead. But it is clear that the 2005 truce, which has lasted for almost 3 years, is now in ruins. The perception is that this part of Sudan holds enormous oil reserves, and with oil projected to be worth $150 in the next few years .... the tinder was already there for a match to light it.

My concern is the involvement of outside powers. During its civil war many external forces got involved. But unlike the past war, China is now the Sudanese Government's main supporter and purchaser of its oil. They have threatened to veto U.N. resolutions concerning Darfur, as well as maintaining close military ties with the Sudanese Government. If we see Chinese advisers, equipment, and/or soldiers involved in this fighting, this will be the start of a new geopolitical crisis for this will be the first time China will be directly involved in a conflict that is far away from its borders. On top of the Chinese, Iran is also involved in training the Sudanese Army.

As I had mentioned in my Sunday post "War And Conflicts In Central Africa -- May 18, 2008", this part of Africa is prime for an arm conflict that could engulf almost 300,00,000 people. The Chinese are already there, Iran is there, U.S. naval forces are off the coast of Somalia, Al Qaeda and every imaginable terrorist group is there .... throw in Africa's history of tribal and religious warfare .... the possibility of a Rwanda style genocide or a total regional war can be easily and realistically contemplated.

Archaeological and anthropological evidence indicates that this region of Africa is the birthplace for man. This same evidence .... as well records that go back to ancient times .... reveals that this region has always been under conflict, probably never being able to experience peace.

Will total break war break out in this region? I hope not. With the Chinese dependence on oil and with the Summer Olympics in a few weeks, China will probably try their best to keep this kettle from boiling over. I expect the West to do the same.

Will Africa's tribal history be kept in check .... probably not. But for the moment we are getting a taste of what may happen. We can also now easily observe how all parties are now clearly positioning themselves to take advantage of what may become Africa's first oil war.

Monday, May 12, 2008

New Tensions Between Sudan And Chad After Khartoum Attack

From Yahoo News:

LIBREVILLE (AFP) - Just two months after their latest attempt at a peace accord, Sudan and neighbouring Chad have once again broken off relations after an attack by Darfur rebels close to the Sudanese capital Khartoum.

Sudan's President Omar el-Beshir, often accused by Chad's head of state Idriss Deby Itno of trying to overthrow him, took action to sever diplomatic ties, accusing Chad of backing a Darfur rebel assault on Khartoum.

His government said it had repulsed the assault by the rebel Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), allegedly backed by Chad, which saw the insurgents reach Khartoum's outskirts with the declared intent of toppling the regime.

Read more ....

Update: Sudan Cuts Ties With Chad After Rebel Attack -- Reuters

Update #2: Sudan Cuts Ties With Chad After Dafur Rebels Reach Khartoum -- Times Online

Update #3: Sudan blames Chad for attack on capital -- Telegraph

Update #4: Sudan Arrests Opposition Leader, Pursues Rebels -- Yahoo News

Update #5: Rebel Raid Prompts Sudan To Break Off Chad Relations -- Independent

Update #6: Islamist Leader Is Arrested In Sudan -- International Herald Tribune

Update #7: Darfur Rebel Leader Vows More Attacks On Khartoum -- Reuters

My Comment: After spending a number of years supporting attacks against Chad, Sudan is now getting a taste of its own medicine. Expect more attacks and violence to now occur.