ኣብ ዋና ከተማ ሱዑድያ ጅዳ፡ ብኣላይነት ሕቡራት መንግስታት ኣመሪካን ሱዕድ ዓረብን ክመያየጡ ዝጸንሑ ወከልቲ ሰራዊት ሱዳንን ተወርዋሪ ረዳኢ ሓይልን ብ11 ጉንበት 2023 ንምክልኻል ሲቪል ወገናት ዝምልከት ስምምዕ ከም ዝኸተሙ ብዝተፈላለያ ማዕከናት ዜና ተሓቢሩ። ክልቲኦም ወገናት ኣብቲ ስምምዕ ንክበጽሑ ዝደረኾም፡ ሕቶ ኣድላይነት ሰብኣዊ ቀረብ ብፍላይ ንነበርቲ ከተማ ካርቱም ንምምላስ፡   ብዝተፈላለዩ ፈተውቲ ህዝቢ ሱዳንን፡ ግዱሳት ወገናትን፡ ንዓለም ለኻዊ ሰብኣዊ ሕግታት ንክምእዘዙ ብዝቐረበሎም መጸዋዕታ ክሰማምዑ ከም ዝተገደዱ በቲ ዘውጽእዎ መግለጺ ኣረጋጊጾም።


እቶም ከተምቲ  ስምምዕ ጅዳ ኣተሓሒዞም፡ ኣብ ግዝኣታዊ ሓድነት ሱዳን ዘለዎም ጽኑዕ እምነት ኣረጋጊጾም። ኣተሓሒዞም ድማ እቲ ዝበጽሕዎ ስምምዕ፡ ንሕጋዊ ድሕንነት፡ ፖለቲካዊ ሕጋውነትን ተሳትፎን ኩሎም ወግናት፡ ዝጻባእ ከምዘይኮነ ኣረጋጊጾም። ነቲ ፈተውቲ ሱዳንን ህዝባን፡ ሰብኣዊ ሕግታት ተኸቲሎም ንክሰማምዑ ዘሕደርሎም ተጽዕኖ ከም ዘኽብርዎ ኣረጋጊጾም፡ ነቲ ስምምዕ ከተግብሩ ዘለዎም  ቅሩብነትውን ኣርእዮም።

ኣተሓሒዞም ድማ እዞም ኣብ ታሕቲ ተጠቒሶም ዘለዉ ዝርዝር ስምምዓት፡ ምስ ዓለም ለኻዊ ሰብኣዊ ሕግታትን ግቡኣትን ዘይጻረሩ ምዃኖም ኣፍሊጦም። እዞም ዝተሰማምዕሎም ነጥብታት እዞም ዝስዕቡ ኮይኖም፡ ኣብ ትሕቲ ነፍሲ ወከፎም ሰፊሕ ዝርዝር ኣለዎም።

1) ድሌታት ህዝቢ ሱዳን ቀዳምነትና ምዃኑ ንኣምን፡ ሲቪል ወገናት ኣብ ኩሉ መዳያት ሓለዋ ንክረኽቡ ድማ ተሰማሚዕና ኣለና። እዚ ስምምዕ እዚ ናይ ሰባት ካብን ናብን ውሑስ ምንቅስቓስ  ዘጠቓልል እዩ።

2) ዓለም ለኻዊ ሰብኣዊ ሕግን መሰልን ከነኽብር ቅሩብነትና ነረጋግጽ።

3) ነቶም ሰብኣዊ መሰል ዝሕልዉን ናይቶም ናይቲ ውግእ ኣካል ዘይኮኑ ሲቪል ወገናት ህይወት፡ ዝዕቅቡን ተበግሶታት ኣፍልጦ ንህብ። ነቶም ሰብኣውነትን ንብረትን ንምዕቃብ ዝግበሩ ንጥፈታት ድማ ነኽብር።

4) ኣብዚ ስምምዕ ዝተጠቕሱን ካለኦት ተዛመድቲ ዓለምለኻዊ ግቡኣትን ኣብ ኩሉ ደረጃ ሓላፍነትና ኣብ ግብሪ ከነውዕሎም ቅርቡነትና ነረጋግጽ።

5) ከም ማሕበር ቀይሕ መስቀልን ወርሕን ሱዳንን፡ ዓለም ለኸ ማሕበር ቀይሕ መስቀልን ዝኣመሰሉን ካለኦት ግዱሳት ሰብኣዊ ትካላትን ምስ ዝምልከቶም ትካላት ኮይኖም ኣድላይ ምንቅስቓሳት ከካይዱ ነፍቅደሎም።

6) ኩሎም ኣብ ትሕቲ ምምሕዳርና ዝንቀሳቐሱ ትካላትን ሰባትን በዚ ስምምዕ ከም ዝቕየዱን ከም ዝተሓባበሩን ክንገብር ኢና።

ኣብ መውዳእታ ክልቲኦም ወገናት ብዛዕባ ንዝተወሰነ ግዜ ቀጺሉ ድማ ንቀዋሚ ተኹሲ ጠጠው ምባል ዝሕግዙ ናይ ዘተ መደባት ክሰርዑ ቅሩባት ምዃኖም ቃል ኣትዮም።

 

Martin Plaut

May 10

Here are two reports which provide chapter and verse about how the Eritrean government puts pressure on Eritreans in the diaspora to extract funds from them, and attempts to intimidate the Eritrean community. They were prepared for the Norwegian government's Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion.

These are some extracts:

·        "A minority organisation which appears to be characterised by conflict, rivalry and factionalism, or which is funded by forces in the country of origin, may in fact be infiltrated or may have originally been established by a foreign power. Eritrean diaspora organisations in particular are subject to this problem."

·        "3.1.2 Among other things, we describe how the Eritrean authorities threaten families with sanctions if persons... engage in opposition activity or do not pay the so-called two per cent tax."

·        "3.2 ...among other things, from Norwegian-Eritrean informations who told of death threats, often made face-to face in various contexts. Several of these cases have been reported to the police, and several victims have been assigned a violence alarm....we also reports more indirect threats, by being told that 'we know where you are and where you live.' Both Ethiopians and Eritreans have reported such threats."

·        "3.3.2...describes acts where discrediting content is spread in social media, through derogatory comments, including toward the Eritrean diaspora."

·        3.4.1...reported from Eritrean informants that pro-regime circles and individuals engage in power struggles in Eritrean diaspora organisations, and can also 'coup' governing bodies."

·        3.4.1 We were further told that to the extent that organised communities survive, it is reportedly because pro-regime individuals have taken control, and excluded Eritreans who do not support the regime. It is also reportedly common to exclude, ostracise or ban Norwegian-Eritreans who are not pro-regime or fail to pay the two per cent tax for meetings, church services or cultural events."

·        3.5 "For Eritreans, the embassy requires the payment of the Eritrean two per cent tax in order to receive a passport, but also public documents, such as diplomas, birth certificates, marriage certificates, etc."

Rapport-2023-10-Transnasjonal-undertrykking en-GBDownload

Rapport-2020-3-Press-og-kontroll en-GBDownload

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ፍሉይ ልኡኽ ሕቡራት መንግስታት ኣመሪካ ኣብ ቀርኒ ኣፍሪቃ ኣንበሳድር ማይክ ሃመር፡ ካብ 10 ክሳብ 19 ጉንበት 2023 ኣብ ዘሎ ግዜ ኣብ ኣመሪካ ምስ ዝርከቡ ኢትዮጵያውያን ተራኺቦም መብርሂ ከም ዝህቡ  ወጻኢ ጉዳይ ኣመሪካ ኣፍሊጡ። ማይክ ሃመር ኣብቲ ርክባት ዝተኩሩሉ ኣጀንዳ ሓፈሻ ህልዊ ኩነታት ኢትዮጵያ  ኮይኑ፡ ብፍላይ ከኣ ኣብ መንጎ ፈደራላዊ መንግስቲ ኢትዮጵያን ክልል ትግራይን ብ2 ሕዳር 2022 ኣብ ደቡብ ኣፍሪቃ ዝተኸተመ ውዕል ሰላምን በጺሕዎ ዘሎ ደረጃን እዩ።

እቲ ርክብ ኣብ ግዝኣት ካሊፎርንያ ከተማ ሎስ ኣንጀሎስ ከም ዝካየድን ኣብቲ ርክባት ዝሳተፉ ብሓፈሻ ኢትዮጵያውያን ከም ዝኾኑን ብፍላይ ግና ናብ ተወለድቲ ኣምሓራ፡ ሶማልያ፡ ኦሮሞን ትግራይን ዘተኩር ከም ዝኾነ ተፈሊጡ። ብዘይካዚ  “ሓድነት ደቂ ኣንስትዮ ቀርኒ ኣፍሪቃ” ዝተባህለ ትካል ኣብ ዘዳልዎ መድረኽ ምስ ማሕበረኮም ኢትዮጵያን ኣመሪካውያን ርክብ ከም ዘካይዱን ኣብዚ ርክብዚ ድማ ምድንፋዕ ሰላምን ምሕያል ሓድነትን ደቂ ኣንስትዮን ንዝብል ጉዳይ ዝያዳ ትኹረት ከም ዝወሃብ  እቲ መግለጺ ኣረዲኡ።

ፍሉይ ልኡኻ ኣመሪካ ኣብ ቀርኒ ኣፍሪቃ ኣንበሳደር ማይክ ሃመር፡ ብሰንኪ እቲ ኣብ ትግራይን ጐረባብቲ ክልላትን ንክልተ ዓመታት ዝተኻየደ ደማዊ ውግእ፡ ኣብ ልዕሊ ኤርትራ ብተደጋጋሚ ወቐሳ ከቕርቡ ካብ ዝጸንሑ ላዕለዎት ሓለፍቲ ሕቡራት መንግስታት ኣመሪካ ሓደ ኮይኖም፡ ኣብ ዝሓለፈ ወርሒ ሚያዝያ 2023፡ ምስ ትካል ሰላም ውድብ ሕቡራት መንግስታት ኣብ ዝገበርዎ ርክብ፡ ሰራዊት ኤርትራ ካብ ትግራይ ንምውጻእ ጻዕሪ ይግበር ምህላዉ ምጥቃሶም ዝዝከር እዩ።

Thursday, 11 May 2023 23:59

Radio Dimtsi Harnnet Kassel 11.05.2023

Written by

ሓይልታት ጸጥታ ህግደፍ ኣብዚ ዝሓለፈ ቅንያት፡ ብዘይብቑዕ ምኽንያት ኣሲርዎም ዝጸንሐ ኤርትራውያን ኣገዲዱ ገንዘብ እናኽፈለ ይፈትሖም ከም ዘሎ ተለቪዥን ኣሰና ሓቢራ። እታ ተለቪዥን እቶም ተኣሲሮም ብነፍሲ ወከፎም 50ሺሕ ናቕፋ እናኸፈሉ ክወጹ ዝተገደዱ፡ ኣብ  ምክትል ወረዳ ሰፍኣ ነባሮ ዓድታት፡ ዝባንሰጊ፡ ደንበ ጉዑፍ፡ ማየልቦ፡ ኣዛሒትን ዓዲ ፈለስትን ከም ዝርከብዎም ሓቢራ።

እዞም ዜጋታት ኣብ ቤት ማእሰርቲ ድዋሩባ ተኣሲሮም ዝጸንሕሉ፡ ቅድሚ ዓሰርተ ዓመታት፡ ኣብ ለይቶ ዝርከብ መሬትኩም “ከይትሓርስዎ ተኣዚዝኩም ከተብቅዑ፡ ነቲ ትእዛዝ ጥሒስኩም ሓሪስኩምዎ” ዝብል ዕባራ ምኽንንያት እዩ። እዞም እሱራት ሰብ ሓዳርን ነፍሰ ጾራትን ደቂ ኣንስትዮን ቤተ ሰብ ስዉኣትን ከም ዝርከብዎም ድማ እቲ ዜና ጠቒሱ።

 ስርዓት ህግደፍ ቅድሚ 10 ዓመታት ተፈጺሙ ዝበሎ ጥሕሰት ጸባጺቡ ኣብዚ እዋንዚ ምእሳሩ፡ ነቲ ማእሰርቲ ከም ምንጪ ኣታዊ ክጥቀመሉ ስለ ዝደለየ ምዃኑ እውን እቲ ሓጺር ጸብጻብ ተለቪዥን ኣሰና ኣመልኪቱ። እቲ ዜና ካልእ ምስዚ ዝዛመድ ኣብነት ንምጥቃስ፡ እቲ ስርዓት ቅድሚ ሕጂ ኣብ ጐደናታት ለሚንኩም ኢሉ ንዝኣሰሮም ድኻታት ገንዘብ ከፊልሎም ክፍትሑ ከም ዘገደደም ጠቒሱ።

ምስዚ ብዝዛመድ እቲ ጉጅለ፡ ቅድሚ ሕጂ፡ ልዕሊ ዕድመ ዝኾኑ፡ እሞ ድማ ካብ ወተሃደራዊ ኣሃዱታቱ ንዝሃደሙ መንእሰያት ስድራቤቶም 50 ሺሕ ናቕፋ ክኸፍሉ  የገድድ ከም ዝነበረ ዝፍለጥ ኮይኑ፡ ቅድሚ ሓደ ዓመት ኣብ ግዜ ውግእ ትግራይ ከኣ “ውላድኩም ኣይከተተን” ብዝብል ስድራቤቶም ክኣስርን ኣባይቶም ዓጽዩ ከከላብቶም ከም ዝጸንሐን ዝዝንጋዕ ኣይኮነን።

ዘጋርዲያን/THE GUARDIAN ዝተባህለት ዕለታዊ ጋዜጣ ዓብይ ብሪታንያ፡ ኣብ ሱዳን ካብ ዝነበሩ ኤርትራውያን ኣስታት 3500 ብህግደፍ ብሓይሊ ተወሲዶም፡ ዝተወሰኑ ካብኣቶም ከም ዝተኣስሩ ኣብ ናይ 7 ጉንበት 2023 ሕታማ ከሲሳ። እታ ጋዜጣ ከም ዘስፈረቶ፡ ካብዞም ብሓይሊ ዝተወስዱ ኤርትራውያን 95 ሽዑ ንሽዑ ኣብ ከተማ ተሰነይ ከም ዝተኣስሩን ካብኣቶም 9 ደቂ ኣንስትዮ ምዃነንን ነቲ ኩነታት ክከታተልዎ ዝጸንሑ ኤርትራውያን ነጠፍቲ ሰብኣዊ መሰል ብምጥቃስ  ጽሒፋ። ካብዞም ዝተኣስሩ ዝተወሰኑ ንህግደፍ ክቃወሙ ዝጸንሑ ምዃኖምን እቶም ዝተረፉ ግና ኣብ ምምሕዳር ህግደፍ ኣብ ውትሕድርና ኣገልጊሎም ዝተሰዱ ምዃኖም ተሓቢሩ።

እቶም ነቲ ኩነታት ዝተኸታተሉ ኣብ ሰብኣዊ መሰል ዝግደሱ ኤርትራውያን ካብ ከተማ ካርቱም ነታ ጋዜጣ ከም ዝገለጹላ፡ እቶም ስደተኛታት ካብቲ ተዓቚበምሉ ዝነበሩ መደበር ብኣውቶቡሳት ኣብ ዶብ ኤርትራን ሱዳናንን ናብ እትርከብ ኣፍደገ 13/ Gate 13 እትበሃል ቦታ  ከም ዝተወስዱን፡ ድሕሪኡ ብዘይድሌቶም ናብ ኤርትራ ከምርሑ ብሓይልታት ጸጥታ ኤርትራ ከም ዝተገደዱን ተፈሊጡ። ምስዚ ብዝተተሓሓዘ ኣብ ውግእ ካርቱም ኣብ ዝተፈላለዩ ከባብታት ናይታ ከተማ 9 ኤርትራውያን ከም ዝሞቱ ኣብታ ጋዜጣ ተጠቒሱ።

ሓደ ኣብ ውትህድርና ኤርትራ ዘገልገለ ሓዉ ተገዲዱ ናብ ኤርትራ ዝተወስዶ ኤርትራዊ፡ ነታ ጋዜጣ ከም ዝጠቐሰላ፡ ኣብ ኤርትራ ዘለዉ ስድራቤት ናይቲ ብሓይሊ ዝተወስደ ግዳይ፡ ኣብ ኣስመራ ሓቲቶም ደሃይ ስለ ዘይረኸቡ፡ ከቢድ ሻቕሎት ከም ዝሓደሮ ሓቢሩ። ካልእ ነቲ ኩነታት ብቐረባ ዝተኸታተለ ኤርትራዊ ብወገኑ፡ እዞም ተገዲዶም ምስተወስዱ ደሃዮም ጠፊኡ ዘሎ ግዳያት ንሓዋሩ ናይ ምጥፋእ ሓደጋ ከየጋጥሞ ዝሓደሮ ስግኣት ከም ዝጠቐሰላ እታ ጋዜጣ ኣስፊራ፡

ኣብ መደበር ስደተኛታት ዝነበሩ ሰራሕተኛታት ላዕለዋይ ኮሚሽ ጉዳይ ስደተኛታት፡ ነቶም ስደተኛታት ዝነበሮም ቀረብ ከም ዝተወደአ ነጊረምዎም ከም ዝነበሩን  እቲ ኩነታት ካብቲ ቦታ ክወጹ ከም ዘገደዶምን ሓደሓደ ካብቶም ስደተኛታት ሓቢሮም።

ብኻልእ ወገን ከኣ ካብ ካርቱም ናብ ደቡብ ሱዳን ክኸዱ ዝፈተኑ ኤርትራውያን፡ ኣብ ዶብ ናብ እትርከብ ከተማ ዋዩ ንምብጻሕ ጥራይ ብነፍሲ ወከፍ 410 ዶላር ክኸፍሉ ይግደዱ ከም ዘለዉ ተፈሊጡ። እዚ ከምዚሉ እንከሎ፡ ናብ ኢትዮጵያ ክኣትዉ ኣብ ከተማ መተማ ዝበጽሑ ኤርትራውያን ካብኡ ከይቅጽሉ ብሓይልታት ጸጥታ ናይታ ሃገር ከም ዝተኸልከሉ  ይሕብሩ ኣለዉ።

 

Martin Plaut

May 5

Source: East African

Sudan's conflict: Outside players backing army, RSF generals

THURSDAY MAY 04 2023   

Sudan's rival generals al-Burhan and Hemedti

Sudan's rival generals, army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan (left) and the leader of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo 'Hemedti'. PHOTO | ASHRAF SHAZLY & EBRAHIM HAMID | AFP

Summary

·        Diplomats and analysts say Cairo is crucial to applying any short-term pressure on Burhan.

·        Saudi Arabia has had close ties to Burhan and Hemedti.

·        Ethiopia and Kenya hold some sway due to their prominent role in regional diplomacy and mediation in Sudan.

·        Critics say the US was too lenient with the generals.

By REUTERS

More by this Author

Military rivals locked in a conflict that erupted in Sudan on April 15 both courted foreign backing in the years leading up to the fighting.

That support could now influence the course of the power struggle between army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the leader of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo commonly known as Hemedti, as well as efforts to stop the violence.

The conflict has brought open warfare to Sudan's capital Khartoum and sparked new unrest in the western region of Darfur, displacing hundreds of thousands of people within Sudan and sending 100,000 fleeing across its borders.

The influence of outside players has loomed over events in Sudan since the overthrow of former leader Omar al-Bashir during a popular uprising four years ago.

Who supports Burhan?

Burhan's most important backer is Egypt, which shares a border with Sudan that more than 40,000 people have crossed since the fighting began.

In both countries, the military has assumed a dominant role in the decades since independence and has intervened following popular uprisings in Egypt when former army chief Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi led the ousting of democratically elected President Mohamed Mursi a decade ago, and in Sudan when Burhan led a military takeover in 2021.

Diplomats and analysts say Egypt feels comfortable dealing with Burhan and sees him as the most likely guarantor of its interests, including in negotiations over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam being constructed on the Blue Nile upstream of Sudan and Egypt.

In recent months, as much of the international community backed a transition plan involving the main civilian coalition to emerge from Sudan's 2019 uprising, Cairo created a parallel track of negotiations involving figures closer to the army.

During the current fighting Egypt has joined calls for an effective ceasefire while saying they consider the conflict an internal matter for Sudan. On Tuesday Egypt's foreign ministry received an envoy for Burhan.

Diplomats and analysts say Cairo is crucial to applying any short-term pressure on Burhan.

Read: Sudan: US mounts pressure for ceasefire

Who supports Hemedti?

The most important regional ally for Hemedti before the conflict was the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Hemedti has presented himself as a bulwark against Islamist-leaning factions that established deep roots in the army and other institutions under Bashir. The UAE has aggressively sought to roll back Islamist influence across the region.

The UAE has provided Hemedti, who grew rich through the gold trade, with a platform for channelling his finances as well as public relations support for the RSF, said Andreas Krieg, Associate Professor at King's College, London.

Analysts however say the UAE has also sought to hedge its bets, retaining ties to Burhan and the army and joining the Quad, a grouping that has taken the lead on diplomacy on Sudan and includes the United States, Saudi Arabia and Britain.

"While it publicly supports the policy approach by the Quad, it has used its networks to create an alternative influence hub with Hemedti and the RSF," said Krieg.

Hemedti had also cultivated ties with Russia. Western diplomats in Khartoum said in 2022 that Russia's Wagner Group was involved in illicit gold mining in Sudan and was spreading disinformation. Hemedti said he advised Sudan to cut ties to Wagner after the US imposed sanctions on the private military contractor. Wagner said on April 19 that it was no longer operating in Sudan.

Read: Russia’s Wagner keeps low profile in Sudan

Which other powers have influence?

Saudi Arabia has had close ties to Burhan and Hemedti, both of whom sent troops to the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen.

As it steps up its diplomatic ambitions across the Middle East, Riyadh has asserted itself in mediating over Sudan while also looking to protect its economic ambitions in the Red Sea region, said Anna Jacobs, Senior Gulf Analyst with Crisis Group.

"Saudi Arabia is focused on Red Sea security, which is integral to Saudi Vision 2030 and investments along the Red Sea like Neom," she said, referring to the futuristic city backed by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Saudi Arabia and the United States have been leading efforts to secure an effective ceasefire.

East African powers Ethiopia and Kenya also hold some sway due to their prominent role in regional diplomacy and previous mediation in Sudan.

Read: Ethiopia praised for helping Sudan evacuees

South Sudan hosted peace talks between the Sudanese state and rebel groups in recent years and was designated as one of the countries that could host talks over the current crisis.

Israel, which had been hoping to move forward in normalising ties with Sudan, has also offered to host talks.

What's the West's position?

Western powers swung behind a transition towards elections as the military shared power with civilians after Bashir's overthrow, offering direct financial support that was frozen when Burhan and Hemedti staged a coup in 2021.

Led by the United States, they supported a new transition deal that was meant to be finalised in early April. However, the deal instead helped trigger the eruption of fighting by creating a stand-off over the future structure of the military.

Critics say the US was too lenient with the generals.

"Their strategy was stability, and their basic misconception was that they would get stability by backing the apparently strong and decisive and cohesive players who happened to be in power," said Alex de Waal, a Sudan expert and head of the World Peace Foundation at Tufts University.

 

Martin Plaut

May 4

"Another potential meddler is Issaias Afwerki, Eritrea’s president, who has sought ties with Mr Dagalo and has a history of backing Sudanese rebels. Another is Khalifa al-Haftar, a Libyan warlord with links to the Wagner Group, who is said to have already sent fuel and arms to the RSF."

Source: Economist

The Horn of Africa sits astride key trade routes 

 

May 3rd 2023 | KHARTOUM AND NAIROBI

Four days after war began in Khartoum, Sudan’s capital, armed men stormed the home of Muhammad. Ordering the businessman (whose name we withheld for his safety) and his family to leave, the soldiers mounted anti-aircraft guns on the roof of the apartment. Muhammad’s family moved in with relatives in a quieter neighbourhood nearby. But that, too, was soon unsafe as the fighting spread, leaving the streets strewn with bodies.

The battle may have started as a narrow power struggle between the official army, known as the Sudanese Armed Forces (saf), and the Rapid Support Forces (rsf), a militia-turned-paramilitary organisation. But the longer it continues, the greater the risk that it may draw in outsiders because of Sudan’s geopolitical importance.

 

For Sudan sits astride the Nile, Egypt’s lifeline. It also has ports close to the Horn of Africa, which controls the southern chokepoint of the Red Sea and is close to the Persian Gulf. These arteries of the world economy are watched over by America, China and France, which all have military bases in Djibouti. “The Horn is highly strategic, and a microcosm of other international disputes,” says Comfort Ero, the president of the International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based think-tank. It is a place where “the West meets the East, where the Gulf meets Europe.”

For now the two sides seem evenly matched. The saf is commanded by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, who seized and then consolidated power as de facto leader of Sudan in coups in 2019 and 2021. It started the conflict with considerable conventional military power, including tanks and fighter jets. Though the rsf is ostensibly the underdog, its commander, Muhammad Hamdan Dagalo (better known as Hemedti), has substantial private wealth, because the rsf is said to control elements of Sudan’s gold trade. He also leads tens of thousands of loyal troops.

It was these assets which enabled Mr Dagalo to vie with General Burhan for control of the transition that followed the overthrow of the brutal Islamist regime under the former dictator Omar al-Bashir in 2019, and later saw him become the country’s vice-president. Guns and money may also have helped him to emerge in recent years as a semi-autonomous figure on the international stage, cutting deals with foreign powers. The rsf is not simply an “insurgent militia”, notes Sharath Srinivasan, a Sudan expert at Cambridge University. “It’s a state actor.”

After nearly three weeks of fighting in Khartoum and elsewhere, in particular in West Darfur, neither side has a decisive advantage. The rsf lacks tanks and air power but is compensating by digging into residential neighbourhoods in the capital. There its men are raping women and forcing them to cook for them, according to a Sudanese woman, whose four female cousins escaped through an air-vent after the rsf had occupied their home.

Civilians in Khartoum also have to contend with air strikes by the saf. On May 1st three women selling tea opposite a hospital were killed by a bomb blast. According to the un, more than 500 civilians have already been killed and many more injured in the fighting (the true figure is likely to be much higher). As many as 800,000 refugees are expected to cross Sudan’s borders in the coming weeks and months.

The rsf, whose troops are also better paid and have more recent combat experience that those of the saf, has managed to secure key parts of the capital including the international airport and the country’s largest oil refinery. It also appears to control the presidential palace and the state broadcaster. “For the past two weeks they were roaming around like they owned the place,” says Waleed Adem, a resident of a rsf-controlled district of east Khartoum.

The rsf also dominates Mr Dagalo’s home region of Darfur and controls two of the region’s three air bases. Bloody clashes in el-Geneina, which began when Arab tribal militias affiliated to the rsf attacked non-Arabs in the town, may have subsided.

The army remains in charge pretty much everywhere else. Thousands of Sudanese and foreign citizens have been evacuated from the Red Sea city of Port Sudan, in the country’s troubled east, which was secured by the saf early in the war. The countryside around Khartoum is also more or less peaceful. “It’s business as usual,” reports a university professor who recently fled the city with his family.

Though the rsf is waging a guerrilla campaign of raids on army units and facilities in the capital, the saf’s control of the skies is taking a toll. “We hit all their supply stores around Khartoum,” says a mid-ranking soldier in the saf. Several convoys of rsf reinforcements from Darfur have reportedly been destroyed by air strikes.

The question is whether either side can quickly break the deadlock. The saf has decades of experience fighting insurgencies in distant regions, but never before in the capital. It cannot simply bomb its way to victory there as it has done elsewhere. “Khartoum is going to be a bit of a meat-grinder for a while,” predicts a Western security analyst. He adds that internal divisions within the saf’s leadership may be hampering its ability to press home its sizeable advantage in heavy weapons.

The rsf, too, finds itself in a quandary. It will struggle to supply and rearm its forces as the fighting continues. Even in the unlikely event of a victory, Mr Dagalo is loathed in Khartoum by residents who hold him responsible for a massacre of hundreds of protesters there in 2019 perpetrated by a combination of forces from the rsf, the police and the intelligence service. His troops’ current conduct has only alienated them more. “The people have the army’s back,” says Mr Adem.

The prospects for a protracted war depend on how Sudan’s neighbouring countries react. Due to its size as well as its strategic location on the Red Sea, Sudan has long been seen as strategically valuable within the region as well as by China, Russia and the West. It overlooks the shipping lanes leading to the Bab al-Mandab strait, through which around 10% of the world’s sea trade passes.

The Gulf countries, in particular the United Arab Emirates (uae) and Saudi Arabia, eye economic interests at play. In December an Emirati firm inked a $6bn deal to develop a port and economic zone on Sudan’s Red Sea coast. The Saudis and the Emiratis supported General Burhan and Mr Dagalo after the joint coup, handing out some $3bn in emergency aid. But neither country has an obvious interest in fuelling the conflict. Saudi Arabia has already evacuated thousands of Sudanese fleeing via Port Sudan. Much as Europe does, it fears a sudden influx of refugees.

Complicating matters, though, is the Emiratis’ murky relationship with Mr Dagalo, who received cash and arms in return for sending his rsf to aid their war in Yemen in 2017. He has since cultivated ties in both Abu Dhabi and Dubai, the uae’s two main statelets. Still the Emiratis do not have “any particular affection for Hemedti”, says Harry Verhoeven of Columbia University. Since the war began there has been little evidence that the uae has continued to supply his forces.

So the Gulf countries may be “hanging back and hedging their bets to see which way the cards fall”, suggests Ms Ero. That may also be the approach of Russia, whose murky mercenary outfit, the Wagner Group, is said to be involved in gold mining in Sudan while helping arm the rsf. The Kremlin’s main aim is to “thwart a democratic transition in Sudan”, says Samuel Ramani, author of “Russia in Africa”. This is because its ambition to build a naval base on the Red Sea is better served by a military government in Khartoum than a civilian, democratic one. And it does not care whether the saf or the rsf prevails.

The civil war in Sudan is not yet a proxy one like those in Syria, Libya or Yemen. But the country shares long and porous borders with conflict-racked neighbours, including the Central African Republic, Chad, Libya and South Sudan. Each has its own bewildering array of militias and rebel groups, many with ethnic or business ties to the rsf or to its rivals. Some may watch for a chance to profit from Sudan’s chaos. “The longer the conflict continues, the more external actors will meddle,” warns Suliman Baldo, who heads the Sudan Transparency and Policy Tracker, a conflict-monitoring group.

Another potential meddler is Issaias Afwerki, Eritrea’s president, who has sought ties with Mr Dagalo and has a history of backing Sudanese rebels. Another is Khalifa al-Haftar, a Libyan warlord with links to the Wagner Group, who is said to have already sent fuel and arms to the rsf.

Mr Dagalo’s rsf and Mr Haftar’s Libyan National Army (lna), which controls much of eastern Libya, have worked together in the past. In 2019 rsf troops were sent to support the lna, which was also backed by the uae, in its assault on Tripoli, Libya’s capital. Two days before Sudan’s civil war erupted, Mr Haftar’s eldest son arrived in Khartoum for talks with Mr Dagalo.

Whatever support Mr Haftar may offer, the rsf may be limited by the Libyan warlord’s need to keep in with Egypt, another of his foreign sponsors. Long Sudan’s most influential neighbour, Egypt is a staunch backer of the saf under General Burhan. It views Sudan as vital to its national security and is loth to see either a civilian government or Mr Dagalo in charge.

Early in the war an Egyptian jet was reported to have struck an rsf ammunition dump. On May 1st Mr Dagalo accused Egypt’s air force of hitting targets in Khartoum North. Though the extent of its military involvement is unknown, Egypt is likely to step up its support for the saf if it is flagging. “Egypt is the most serious factor,” says Magdi el-Gizouli of the Rift Valley Institute. “The Egyptian goal now is to save central power in Sudan as they know it.”

A wider conflagration may still be avoided. Despite ethnic clashes in Darfur, the conflict has so far been generally limited to fighting between the two armed factions. On May 2nd both sides agreed to a seven-day ceasefire brokered by South Sudan’s president. Peace talks in Juba, South Sudan’s capital, could soon begin.

All the while, a humanitarian disaster is mounting. Food and water supplies in Khartoum are dwindling. Almost no hospital in the capital is functioning. Pregnant women have died on route to give birth. “If there is no ceasefire, everything will collapse,” warns Mohamed Lemine, who heads the un’s sexual and reproductive health agency in Sudan.

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