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40 killed in central Sudan paramilitary attack on village

40 killed in central Sudan paramilitary attack on village
Families flee RSF advances in Sudan's Al Jazira state, on Sennar Road in the city of al-Dinder, Sennar state, Sudan, July 18, 2024. (REUTERS/File Photo)
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Updated 21 November 2024

40 killed in central Sudan paramilitary attack on village

40 killed in central Sudan paramilitary attack on village
  • UN says over 340,000 people have been displaced from their homes in Sudan’s breadbasket state ofAl-Jazira state
  • The 19-month Sudan army-RSF war has uprooted over 11 million people and killed tens of thousands, mostly civilians

PORT SUDAN: An attack by paramilitary forces that began Tuesday evening has left 40 people dead, a medic told AFP from a central Sudan village, following a month of escalating violence in Al-Jazira state.
“All 40 people suffered direct gunshot wounds,” the medic said from Wad Rawah Hospital, just north of Wad Oshaib village, requesting anonymity for their own protection after repeated attacks on medical personnel.
The paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), at war with the army since mid-April 2023, first attacked the village, located 100 kilometers north of Al-Jazira’s capital Wad Madani, on Tuesday evening, eyewitnesses said.
“The attack resumed this morning,” one eyewitness told AFP by phone on Wednesday, adding that fighters were “looting property.”
It is the latest in a month-long series of attacks on Al-Jazira villages by the RSF following the defection of a key paramilitary commander to the army’s side last month.
According to the United Nations, over 340,000 people have been displaced from their homes in the state, a key agricultural region that was formerly considered Sudan’s breadbasket.
The UN Secretary-General’s spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said on Friday that the violence in Al-Jazira “is putting the lives of tens of thousands of people at risk.”
The war between the army, led by Sudan’s de facto leader Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, and the RSF, commanded by his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, has already killed tens of thousands of people across the country.
It has also uprooted over 11 million people, more than 3 million of whom have fled across Sudan’s borders.




Sudan's Ambassador to the UN Al-Harith Idriss Al-Harith Mohamed addresses the UN Security Council meeting on the situation on Sudan and South Sudan, at UN headquarters in New York City, on Nov. 18, 2024. (REUTERS)

The brutal war has seen both sides accused of war crimes, with RSF fighters accused of laying siege to entire villages, carrying out summary executions and systematically looting civilian property.
Eyewitnesses, rights groups and the UN have reported villages in eastern Al-Jazira coming under total siege in recent weeks, causing compounding humanitarian crises.
In the village of Al-Hilaliya, residents have been cut off from essential supplies, with dozens falling sick “allegedly due to poisoned food.”
The UN’s Dujarric said on Friday that many of the displaced arriving in neighboring states “had walked for days and arrived with nothing but the clothes on their backs.”
Even in areas safe from the fighting, hundreds of thousands of displaced people are facing epidemics including cholera, decimated infrastructure and a looming famine.
“They are now sheltering in the open, including children, women, older persons and people who are sick,” Dujarric added.
According to health officials and the UN, the conflict has forced 80 percent of health facilities in conflict-affected areas to shut down.
Sudan is currently facing what the UN has called one of the worst humanitarian crises in recent memory, with 26 million people suffering from acute hunger.


Pope Leo decries Sudan violence, urges dialogue and relief effort

Pope Leo decries Sudan violence, urges dialogue and relief effort
Updated 54 min 22 sec ago

Pope Leo decries Sudan violence, urges dialogue and relief effort

Pope Leo decries Sudan violence, urges dialogue and relief effort
  • Pontiff appeals for an immediate ceasefire and the opening of humanitarian corridors in Sudan

VATICAN CITY: Pope Leo on Sunday appealed for an immediate ceasefire and the opening of humanitarian corridors in Sudan, saying he was following with “great sorrow” reports of terrible brutality in the city of El-Fasher in Darfur.
“Indiscriminate violence against women and children, attacks on defenseless civilians and serious obstacles to humanitarian action are causing unacceptable suffering,” the pope said during his weekly Angelus address to crowds in St. Peter’s Square.
He called on the international community to act “decisively and generously” to support relief efforts.
The UN human rights office said on Friday that hundreds of civilians and unarmed fighters may have been killed late last month when the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces captured El-Fasher, the Sudanese army’s last major holdout in Darfur.
The city fell a week ago after an 18-month siege, prompting tens of thousands to flee.
Pope Leo also addressed the situation in Tanzania on Sunday, saying there had been clashes with numerous casualties after recent national elections. He urged all sides to avoid violence and “walk the path of dialogue.”


Libya detains education minister over textbook scandal

Libya detains education minister over textbook scandal
Updated 02 November 2025

Libya detains education minister over textbook scandal

Libya detains education minister over textbook scandal
  • Libyan prosecutors have announced they are detaining the country’s education minister for negligence over a scandal involving school textbooks

TRIPOLI: Libyan prosecutors have announced they are detaining the country’s education minister for negligence over a scandal involving school textbooks.
The minister, Ali Al-Abed, is serving in an interim capacity after taking over from Moussa Al-Megarief, who was himself sentenced in March to three-and-a-half years in prison over a similar case involving a textbook shortage.
The prosecutor general’s office said in a statement Saturday night that it had ordered the preventative detention of Abed and the head of the ministry’s school programs department “pending an investigation into harm to the public interest and violation of the right to education.”
Both Abed’s case and that of his predecessor have drawn intense public attention in Libya.
The prosecutors said the investigation into Abed concerned the granting of contracts to print books for the current school year, and had found “irregularities in the administrative and financial procedures” surrounding such contracts.
It also revealed a “lapse in the duty to provide the textbooks to two million students on time,” they added.
The 2025-2026 school year began over a month late in Libya, with the parents of nearly 2.6 million students who lacked books forced to shell out for photocopies.
In Libyan public schools, textbooks are provided free of charge through the end of secondary school, paid for through a special allocation in the education ministry budget.


Turkiye set to call for action on Gaza as soon as possible, source says

Turkiye set to call for action on Gaza as soon as possible, source says
Updated 02 November 2025

Turkiye set to call for action on Gaza as soon as possible, source says

Turkiye set to call for action on Gaza as soon as possible, source says
  • Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan is expected to call at a meeting in Istanbul on Monday with Arab and muslim ministers

ISTANBUL: Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan is expected to call at a meeting in Istanbul on Monday for arrangements to be made as soon as possible to ensure the security and administration of Gaza by Palestinians, a foreign ministry source said on Sunday.
The foreign ministers of Qatar, ֱ, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Pakistan and Indonesia are set to join the meeting on ceasefire developments and the humanitarian situation in Gaza, the Turkish foreign ministry source said.
The source said Fidan was expected to “emphasize the importance of coordinated action by Muslim countries for the ceasefire to evolve into a lasting peace.”
Countries taking part in the Istanbul talks all attended a meeting with US President Donald Trump in New York in September on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.
The US-brokered Gaza truce, which left thorny issues like the disarmament of Palestinian militant group Hamas and a timeline for Israeli withdrawal from Gaza unresolved, has been tested by periodic violence since coming into force.
The source said Fidan is set to tell the meeting that Israel is “making excuses” to end the ceasefire and emphasize the need for the international community to “take a resolute stance against Israel’s provocative actions.”
He was also set to say that humanitarian aid entering Gaza is insufficient and Israel has not fulfilled its obligations in this regard.
Relations between Turkiye and Israel have hit new lows during the Gaza war, with President Tayyip Erdogan harshly criticizing Israel’s attacks on the enclave.
Turkiye helped persuade Hamas to accept Trump’s peace plan and has expressed a willingness to take part in an international task force to monitor ceasefire implementation.
However, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said last Monday that Israel won’t accept the presence of Turkish armed forces in Gaza under the US plan to end the war.


Syrian leader to discuss sanctions, reconstruction in US visit: FM

Syrian leader to discuss sanctions, reconstruction in US visit: FM
Updated 02 November 2025

Syrian leader to discuss sanctions, reconstruction in US visit: FM

Syrian leader to discuss sanctions, reconstruction in US visit: FM
  • Ahmed Al-Sharaa is expected in the US capital in early November
  • Discussions will also revolve around reconstruction after more than a decade of war

MANAMA: Syria’s president will discuss issues including lifting remaining sanctions, reconstruction and counter-terrorism when he becomes the country’s first leader to pay an official visit to Washington later this month, the foreign minister said Sunday.

Ahmed Al-Sharaa is expected in the US capital in early November, Syria’s top diplomat Asaad Al-Shaibani told a panel at the Manama Dialogue in Bahrain.

“This visit is certainly historic,” he said.

“Many topics will be discussed, starting with the lifting of sanctions,” Shaibani said, adding: “Today we are fighting (the Islamic State) ... any effort in this regard requires international support.”

Discussions will also revolve around reconstruction after more than a decade of war, he said.

The foreign ministry in Damascus confirmed the trip would be the first ever visit to the White House by a Syrian president.

On Saturday, US envoy to Syria Tom Barrack said Sharaa was heading to Washington “hopefully” to sign an agreement to join the international US-led alliance against the Daesh.

Though it will be Sharaa’s first visit to Washington, it will be his second to the US after a landmark UN trip in September, where the former jihadist became the first Syrian president in decades to address the UN General Assembly in New York.

In May, the interim leader, whose Islamist forces ousted longtime ruler Bashar Assad late last year, met US President Donald Trump for the first time in Riyadh during a historic visit that led to the US leader vowing to lift economic sanctions on Syria.

Israel talks

Syria and Israel remain technically at war, but they opened direct negotiations after Assad was toppled by an Islamist-led coalition last December.

Trump has expressed hope that Syria will join other Arab countries that have normalized ties with Israel under the so-called Abraham Accords.

But Shaibani said that “regarding Syria and the Abraham Accords, this is an issue that is not being considered and has not been discussed.”

A Syrian official had said earlier this year that Syria expects to finalize security and military agreements with Israel in 2025, in what would be a breakthrough less than a year after Assad’s ouster.

Since December, Israel has deployed troops in a UN-patrolled buffer zone that separates the countries’ forces and has launched hundreds of strikes in Syria. Damascus has not retaliated.

“We do not want Syria to enter a new war, and Syria is not currently in a position to threaten any party, including Israel,” said Shaibani.

He said the negotiations underway were focused on “reaching a security agreement that does not undermine the 1974 agreement (cementing a ceasefire with Israel) and does not legitimize any new reality that Israel might impose in the south.”


Iran’s president says Tehran will rebuild its nuclear facilities

Iran’s president says Tehran will rebuild its nuclear facilities
Updated 43 min 51 sec ago

Iran’s president says Tehran will rebuild its nuclear facilities

Iran’s president says Tehran will rebuild its nuclear facilities
  • US President Donald Trump has warned that he would order fresh attacks on Iran’s nuclear sites should Tehran try to restart facilities

DUBAI: Tehran will rebuild its nuclear facilities “with greater strength,” Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian told state media on Sunday, adding that the country does not seek a nuclear weapon. US President Donald Trump has warned that he would order fresh attacks on Iran’s nuclear sites should Tehran try to restart facilities that the United States bombed in June.
Pezeshkian made his comments during a visit to the country’s Atomic Energy Organization, during which he met with senior managers from Iran’s nuclear industry.
“Destroying buildings and factories will not create a problem for us, we will rebuild and with greater strength,” the Iranian president told state media.
In June, the US
launched strikes
on Iranian nuclear facilities that Washington says were part of a program geared toward developing nuclear weapons. Tehran maintains that its nuclear program is for purely civilian purposes.
“It’s all intended for solving the problems of the people, for disease, for the health of the people,” Pezeshkian said in reference to Iran’s nuclear activities.