Home Conflict Sudanese government agrees to reopen key boarder crossing for humanitarian aid.
Conflict

Sudanese government agrees to reopen key boarder crossing for humanitarian aid.

Share
Share

By Chinasaokwu Helen okoro


A key border crossing for humanitarian aid to enter Sudan will be reopened, the country’s government said Thursday, as the war intensifies, causing a growing number of people in the country to need food, water, shelter, and medical care.

Sudan’s Sovereign Council announced it will open the Adre crossing, on the country’s border with Chad, for a period of three months. It was closed in February by the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), which alleged that the crossing was being used to move weapons.

The vital crossing’s reopening follows growing calls for greater humanitarian assistance in Sudan’s Darfur region, as civil war between the SAF and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) continues to ravage the country. Sudan is at a “breaking point,” one United Nations agency said earlier this week.

At a UN Security Council meeting on August 6, the United States accused the SAF of “restricting humanitarians from accessing supplies through the critical Adre crossing.” Similarly, the United Kingdom said the armed forces were “obstructing aid delivery into Darfur, including shutting the Adre crossing, the most direct route to deliver assistance at scale.”

This comes as “famine conditions are prevalent” in parts of Sudan’s North Darfur state, including in the Zamzam camp — located near the state’s capital El Fasher and home to around half a million people displaced by civil war — according to an Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) report released in July.

Some 26 million people are in need of assistance in Sudan — more than half of the country’s population, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

More than 10 million people have fled their homes since civil war broke out in April 2023 and over half the population faces acute hunger, UN OCHA detailed.

On Tuesday, UNICEF, the UN’s children’s agency, said Sudan’s humanitarian crisis was “the biggest in the world” for children, by numbers,

“Tens of thousands” of Sudanese children are at risk of death if action is not urgently taken, UNICEF spokesperson James Elder warned at a press briefing. “Thousands of children have been killed or injured in Sudan’s war. Sexual violence and recruitment are increasing. And the situation is even worse where an ongoing humanitarian presence remains denied,” Elder said.

About The Author

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

LATEST POST

Metro

Woman Arrested for Allegedly Trying to Kill 12-Year-Old House Help

Woman Arrested for Allegedly Trying to Kill 12-Year-Old House Help The Abia State Police Command has taken a 35-year-old woman into custody after...

Sport

FIFA Dismisses Belgium’s Protest, Clears Balogun for USA’s World Cup Knockout Clash

FIFA Dismisses Belgium’s Protest, Clears Balogun for USA’s World Cup Knockout Clash FIFA has turned down an appeal lodged by the Royal Belgian...

News

PRESS RELEASE LAWMA SUSTAINS STATEWIDE OPERATION DEEP CLEAN, INTENSIFIES ENFORCEMENT ACROSS LAGOS

PRESS RELEASE LAWMA SUSTAINS STATEWIDE OPERATION DEEP CLEAN, INTENSIFIES ENFORCEMENT ACROSS LAGOS Clears Black Spots and Shorelines, Conducts Joint Enforcement, Deepens Community Engagement...

News

Dreams Cut Short as Nigerian Medical Student Dies After Russian Strike

Dreams Cut Short as Nigerian Medical Student Dies After Russian Strike What was meant to be one of the happiest moments of her...

Sport

Norway Eliminates Five-Time Champions Brazil as Haaland Scores Twice

Norway Eliminates Five-Time Champions Brazil as Haaland Scores Twice Erling Haaland delivered when it mattered most, scoring twice in the closing stages as...

Africa

Africa’s Talking Drum: No Palm Tree Grows for One Family

By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu Africa’s Talking Drum: No Palm Tree Grows for One Family By the time the first rays of the sun...

Health

Every Step Through Floodwater Could Cost You Your Health

Every Step Through Floodwater Could Cost You Your Health The rain may have stopped, but the danger often remains long after the clouds...

Religion

Pope Leo XIV Urges World Not to Lose Hope as War and Suffering Persist

Pope Leo XIV Urges World Not to Lose Hope as War and Suffering Persist Pope Leo XIV has urged people around the world...

Sport

World Cup 2026: Canada’s World Cup Ends in Morocco Defeat

World Cup 2026: Canada’s World Cup Ends in Morocco Defeat Canada’s hopes of extending its historic World Cup run came to an end...

Entertainment

Davido Shares the One Thing Fame Must Never Take Away

Davido Shares the One Thing Fame Must Never Take Away Fame may bring wealth, recognition and influence, but Afrobeats star David Adeleke, popularly...

InternationalMetro

11-Year-Old Hero Hailed After Saving Drowning Man

11-Year-Old Hero Hailed After Saving Drowning Man A frightening moment at a swimming pool in Lexington, Kentucky, ended in hope after an 11-year-old...

Related Articles

Trump Issues Stark Warning to Iran as Fresh US Strikes Ignite Regional Tensions

Trump Issues Stark Warning to Iran as Fresh US Strikes Ignite Regional...

Fresh Violence Leaves Residents, Police Officers Dead in Katsina, Kaduna

Fresh Violence Leaves Residents, Police Officers Dead in Katsina, Kaduna A fresh...

Tinubu Coup Trial Takes New Twist as Court Orders Probe of VeryDarkMan

Tinubu Coup Trial Takes New Twist as Court Orders Probe of VeryDarkMan...

Iran Alleges Ceasefire Violations, Orders Closure of Strait of Hormuz

Iran Alleges Ceasefire Violations, Orders Closure of Strait of Hormuz Iran has...