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Sudan warring sides make humanitarian pledge without truce Khartoum, May 12 (AFP) May 12, 2023 Warplanes roared overhead as explosions rocked Khartoum on Friday, just hours after Sudan's warring parties agreed to respect humanitarian principles in their spiralling conflict, without a truce in sight. Nearly one month after the outbreak of the fighting that has killed more than 750 people and displaced hundreds of thousands, the two sides signed the agreement late Thursday at talks in the Saudi city of Jeddah. But already by the next morning the situation on the ground appeared unchanged, with the forces of two rival generals again exchanging fire in the capital, which is home to five million people. A witness in Khartoum's south reported "fighter jets overhead and the sound of clashes and explosions", while another in the north reported "air strikes and the sound of anti-aircraft missiles". In west Darfur, which has seen some of the bloodiest fighting, people took cover from heavy gunfire and artillery blasts, witnesses said. Envoys for the two generals -- army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and paramilitary commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo -- had agreed in Jeddah to "affirm our commitment to ensure that civilians are protected". The agreement commits both sides to let in badly needed humanitarian assistance and also calls for the restoration of electricity, water and other basic services.
But US diplomats were frank about the obstacles in the nearly week-long Jeddah talks. "This is not a ceasefire. This is an affirmation of their obligations under international humanitarian law," said a US official involved in the negotiations, adding the two sides were "quite far apart". Almost 200,000 people have fled Sudan in addition to hundreds of thousands who have been displaced inside the northeast African country, the UN said Friday. At least 18 humanitarian workers have been killed since the conflict flared on April 15, with many NGOs and UN agencies suspending their work. The World Food Programme said millions of dollars' worth of food was looted in Khartoum alone.
The region has been ravaged by conflict since 2003, when former dictator Omar al-Bashir armed nomadic Arab raiders -- including the Janjaweed, from which Daglo's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces stemmed -- to counter an ethnic minority rebellion. The war left hundreds of thousands dead and more than two million displaced. Darfur remains awash in weapons, and has seen hundreds killed and hundreds of thousands displaced during the current hostilities. In April alone, more than 200 people were killed in clashes between an Arab community and the non-Arab Massalit minority in the Krink area of West Darfur. In El Geneina, the capital of West Darfur state, witnesses said civilians were trying to flee heavy gun and artillery fire on Friday. "The clashes are now concentrated in the city's east, between Arab and African groups," one of them told AFP. The UN said Darfur civilians were again being armed in the latest unrest, which "have triggered intercommunal violence", with accounts of hundreds of deaths, rampant looting and arson attacks. According to Mohamed Osman, researcher at Human Rights Watch, the people of Darfur have been "cut off", with "shops and the local market destroyed, and the main hospital not working". "There is no access to anything," he told AFP, adding that "this fighting is happening after years of Darfur -- West Darfur in particular -- being neglected."
The Forces of Freedom and Change, the pro-democracy force sidelined in a 2021 putsch, saluted the Jeddah declaration as "a first step in the right direction". The UN-led support mission for Sudan, which also includes the African Union and regional IGAD bloc, called on the warring factions to allow humanitarian access. Egypt said the declaration should "pave the way" for "a comprehensive and permanent ceasefire". After previous truces evaporated, the United States said the two sides also agreed in Jeddah for the first time on ways to monitor any ceasefire. A second US official said the negotiations were "very tough" and acknowledged both sides may have ulterior motives. "Candidly, there is some hope on both sides that the other side would be seen as being the perpetrator of violations," he said. "We've seen violations by both sides in all the ceasefires to date and don't expect that to change." burs-bha/dv
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