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Sudan’s former premier Hamdok says recent military gains won’t end the war

Sudan’s former premier Hamdok says recent military gains won’t end the war
Sudan’s former prime minister Abdalla Hamdok. (AFP/File)
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Updated 04 June 2025

Sudan’s former premier Hamdok says recent military gains won’t end the war

Sudan’s former premier Hamdok says recent military gains won’t end the war

MARRAKECH: Sudan’s former prime minister on Wednesday dismissed the military’s moves to form a new government as “fake,” saying its recent victories in recapturing the capital Khartoum and other territory will not end the country’s two-year civil war.

Abdalla Hamdok said no military victory, in Khartoum or elsewhere, could end the war that has killed tens of thousands and driven millions from their homes.

“Whether Khartoum is captured or not captured, it’s irrelevant,” Hamdok said on the sidelines of the Mo Ibrahim Foundation’s governance conference in Morocco. 

“There is no military solution to this. No side will be able to have outright victory.”

Hamdok became Sudan’s first civilian prime minister after decades of military rule in 2019, trying to lead a democratic transition. He resigned in January 2022 after a turbulent stretch in which he was ousted in a coup and briefly reinstated amid international pressure.

The following year, warring generals plunged the country into civil war. Sudan today bears the grim distinction of being home to some of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.

Fighting between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces has left at least 24,000 dead, though many believe the true toll is far worse.

Both sides stand accused of war crimes. 

The RSF, with roots in Darfur’s notorious Janjaweed militia, has been accused of carrying out genocide. The army is accused of unleashing chemical weapons and targeting civilians where they live.

The war has driven about 13 million people from their homes, including 4 million who have crossed into neighboring countries. Famine is setting in and cholera is sweeping through.

The military recaptured the Khartoum area from the RSF in March, as well as some surrounding territory. Army chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah Al-Burhan has framed the advances as a major turning point in the conflict.

Last month, he appointed a new prime minister, Kamil Al-Taib Idris, for the first time since the war began, tasked with forming a new government. But the fighting has continued. 

The RSF has regrouped in its stronghold in Darfur and made advances elsewhere, including in Kordofan.

Hamdok, a 69-year-old former economist who now leads a civilian coalition from exile, called the idea that the conflict was drawing down “total nonsense.” The idea that reconstruction can begin in Khartoum while fighting rages elsewhere is “absolutely ridiculous,” he said.

“Any attempt at creating a government in Sudan today is fake. It is irrelevant,” he said, arguing that lasting peace can’t be secured without addressing the root causes of the war.

Hamdok said a ceasefire and a credible process to restore democratic, civilian rule would need to confront Sudan’s deep inequalities, including uneven development, issues among different identity groups and questions about the role of religion in government.

“Trusting the soldiers to bring democracy is a false pretense,” he added.

Though rooted in longstanding divisions, the war has been supercharged by foreign powers accused of arming both sides.

Pro-democracy groups, including Hamdok’s Somoud coalition, have condemned atrocities committed by both the army and the RSF.

“What we would like to see is anybody who is supplying arms to any side to stop,” he said.


Netanyahu hints at opposition to any Turkish forces in Gaza

Updated 3 sec ago

Netanyahu hints at opposition to any Turkish forces in Gaza

Netanyahu hints at opposition to any Turkish forces in Gaza
Responding to a question about the idea of Turkish security forces in Gaza, Netanyahu said: “I have very strong opinions about that. Want to guess what they are?“
Turkiye’s Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment

JERUSALEM/CAIRO: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hinted on Wednesday at his opposition to any role for Turkish security forces in the Gaza Strip as part of a mission to monitor a US-backed ceasefire with the Palestinian militant group Hamas.
Speaking in Jerusalem alongside visiting US Vice President JD Vance, Netanyahu said they had discussed the “day-after” for Gaza, including who could provide security in the territory shattered by two years of war.
Vance, who said on Tuesday US President Donald Trump’s ceasefire plan was going better than expected, reiterated his optimism. “I never said it was easy. But what I am is optimistic that the ceasefire is going to hold and that we can actually build a better future in the entire Middle East,” he said.
With a fragile ceasefire in place for 12 days, focus has switched to the second phase of Trump’s Gaza plan.
This requires Hamas to disarm and foresees the establishment of an internationally-supervised Palestinian committee to run Gaza with an international force supporting vetted Palestinian police.

NETANYAHU HAS ‘STRONG OPINIONS’ ON TURKISH ROLE IN GAZA
Responding to a question about the idea of Turkish security forces in Gaza, Netanyahu said: “I have very strong opinions about that. Want to guess what they are?“
Turkiye’s Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment, while the Defense Ministry declined to comment on the issue.
Vance said on Tuesday there would be a “constructive role” for Turkiye to play but that Washington wouldn’t force anything on Israel when it came to foreign troops “on their soil.”
Once warm relations between NATO member Turkiye and Israel hit new lows during the Gaza war, with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan sharply criticizing Israel’s attacks on the enclave and elsewhere in the region, and Syria — which borders both states -emerging as an arena of intensifying rivalry.
Turkiye, which helped persuade Hamas to accept Trump’s plan, has said it would take part in the international task force to monitor the ceasefire implementation, and that its armed forces could serve in a military or civilian capacity as needed.
Hamas has resisted pressure to disarm, saying that it is ready to hand its weapons to a future Palestinian state.
Vance said: “We have a very, very tough task ahead of us, which is to disarm Hamas, but rebuild Gaza to make life better for the people of Gaza, but also to ensure that Hamas is no longer a threat to our friends in Israel.”

Gaza health ‘catastrophe’ will last for ‘generations’: WHO chief

Gaza health ‘catastrophe’ will last for ‘generations’: WHO chief
Updated 9 min 57 sec ago

Gaza health ‘catastrophe’ will last for ‘generations’: WHO chief

Gaza health ‘catastrophe’ will last for ‘generations’: WHO chief
  • Despite ceasefire, aid deliveries remain far below target: Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus
  • He urges Israel to ‘de-link’ humanitarian supplies from wider conflict

LONDON: The health “catastrophe” in Gaza will last for “generations to come,” the World Health Organization’s chief has told the BBC Radio 4 “Today” program.

Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called for a substantial surge in aid to the enclave in order to meet the needs of Palestinians.

Despite Israel allowing more medical aid and other supplies following the ceasefire with Hamas on Oct. 10, levels remain lower than needed to rebuild Gaza’s health system, he said.

The US, which brokered the ceasefire, has said the first phase of the plan should see the unlimited distribution of supplies “without interference.”

Yet the increase in aid has been smaller than anticipated, Ghebreyesus said, adding that Palestinians in Gaza have experienced famine, “overwhelming” injuries, the collapse of their healthcare system and disease outbreaks compounded by the destruction of sanitation infrastructure.

“On top of that, (there is) restricted access to humanitarian aid. This is a very fatal combination, so that makes (the situation) catastrophic and beyond words,” he said.

“If you take the famine and combine it with a mental health problem which we see is rampant, then the situation is a crisis for generations to come.”

Ghebreyesus called on Israel to “de-link” the supply of aid from the wider conflict, after it temporarily halted humanitarian deliveries following the killing of two soldiers on Sunday.

The Israel Defense Forces claimed that its personnel were killed in an ambush by Hamas, but the Palestinian group said it was unaware of the clashes. Substantial international pressure led to Israel reinstating aid deliveries the following day.

“There should be full access (for aid), there should not be any condition, especially after all the living hostages were released, and a good part of the remains are transferred. I did not expect there would be additional restrictions,” said Ghebreyesus, adding that “since the US has brokered the peace deal it has the responsibility of making sure that all sides are respecting” it.

Israel must also allow in aid groups that were previously denied entry to Gaza, he said, condemning the blocking of certain health supplies into the enclave after it claimed that they could have dual-use capabilities.

“If you are going to build a field hospital, you need the canvas and the pillars (for tents). So, if the pillars are removed, because of an excuse that they could be dual-use, then you can’t have a tent,” he said.

Ghebreyesus called for a ramping up of medical flights from Gaza, after 700 people died while waiting to be evacuated.

The UN’s official estimate of the cost to reconstruct Gaza after two years of war stands at $70 billion.

About 10 percent of that must be spent on rehabilitating the enclave’s damaged health system, Ghebreyesus said.

“We have been saying for a long time that peace is the best medicine. The ceasefire we have is a very fragile one and some people have died even after the ceasefire because it was broken a couple of times,” he added.

“What is very sad is many people were cheering in the streets because they were very happy there was a peace deal. Imagine, (some of) those same people are dead after they were told the war is over.”


Ryanair restarts 18 routes from Jordan, plans expansion

Ryanair restarts 18 routes from Jordan, plans expansion
Updated 25 min 21 sec ago

Ryanair restarts 18 routes from Jordan, plans expansion

Ryanair restarts 18 routes from Jordan, plans expansion
  • Ryanair is in talks with authorities in Jordan about increasing the number of routes

DUBLIN: Ryanair will run 84 weekly flights from Jordan’s capital Amman this winter after restarting operations paused by the war in Gaza and is in talks about a significant expansion, Europe’s largest low-cost carrier said on Wednesday.
Ryanair is in talks with authorities in Jordan about increasing the number of routes it flies from the country from 18 to 50, the airline said in a statement.


Turkiye pressing for Western fighter jets to claw back regional edge

Turkiye pressing for Western fighter jets to claw back regional edge
Updated 31 min 59 sec ago

Turkiye pressing for Western fighter jets to claw back regional edge

Turkiye pressing for Western fighter jets to claw back regional edge
  • Türkiye aims to leverage its best relations with the West in years to add to its aging fleet 40 Eurofighter Typhoons
  • Erdogan is expected to discuss the proposal on visits to Qatar and Oman on Wednesday and Thursday, with jet numbers, pricing, and timelines the main issues

ANKARA: Anxious to bolster its air power, Turkiye has proposed to European partners and the US ways it could swiftly obtain advanced fighter jets as it seeks to make up ground on regional rivals such as Israel, sources familiar with the talks say.
NATO-member Turkiye, which has the alliance’s second-largest military, aims to leverage its best relations with the West in years to add to its aging fleet 40 Eurofighter Typhoons, for which it inked a preliminary agreement in July, and later also US-made F-35 jets, despite Washington sanctions that currently block any deal.
Strikes by Israel — the Middle East’s most advanced military with hundreds of US-supplied F-15, F-16 and F-35 fighters — on Turkiye’s neighbors Iran and Syria, as well as on Lebanon and Qatar, unnerved Ankara in the last year. They laid bare key vulnerabilities, prompting its push for rapid air power reinforcement to counter any potential threats and not be left exposed, officials say.
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has sharply criticized Israel’s attacks on Gaza and elsewhere in the Middle East and once warm relations between the two countries have sunk to new lows. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned that Turkiye’s bases, rebel allies and support for the army in Syria posed a threat to Israel.
Greece, a largely symbolic but sensitive threat for Turkiye, is expected to receive a batch of advanced F-35s in the next three years. In years past, jets from the two NATO states engaged in scattered dogfights over the Aegean, and Greece has previously expressed concerns about Turkish military build-up.

TURKEY WOULD BUY SECOND-HAND PLANES TO GET THEM FAST
For the Typhoons, Turkiye is nearing a deal with Britain and other European countries in which it would promptly receive 12 of them, albeit used, from previous buyers Qatar and Oman to meet its immediate needs, according to a person familiar with the matter.
Eurofighter consortium members Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain would approve the second-hand sale proposal, in which they would provide Turkiye with 28 new jets in coming years pending a final purchase agreement, the person said.
Erdogan is expected to discuss the proposal on visits to Qatar and Oman on Wednesday and Thursday, with jet numbers, pricing, and timelines the main issues.
Erdogan is then expected to host British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz later this month, when agreements could be sealed, sources say.
A UK government spokesperson told Reuters that a memorandum of understanding that Britain and Turkiye signed in July paves the way “for a multibillion-pound order of up to 40 aircraft,” adding: “We look forward to agreeing the final contracting details soon.”
German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul, who was in Ankara last week, said Berlin supported the jets purchase and later told broadcaster NTV that a deal could follow within the year.
Turkiye’s defense ministry said no final agreement had been reached and that talks with Britain were moving in a positive direction, adding other consortium members backed the procurement. Qatar and Oman did not immediately comment.

TURKEY, US HAVE POLITICAL WILL TO RESOLVE ISSUES
Acquiring the advanced F-35s has proven trickier for Ankara, which has been barred from buying them since 2020 when Washington slapped it with CAATSA sanctions over its purchase of Russian S-400 air defenses.
Erdogan failed to make headway on the issue at a White House meeting with President Donald Trump last month. But Turkiye still aims to capitalize on the two leaders’ good personal ties, and Erdogan’s help convincing Palestinian militant group Hamas to sign Trump’s Gaza ceasefire agreement, to eventually reach a deal.
Separate sources have said that Ankara considered proposing a plan that could have included a US presidential “waiver” to overcome the CAATSA sanctions and pave the way for an eventual resolution of the S-400 issue and F-35 purchase.
Turkiye’s possession of the S-400s remains the main obstacle to purchasing F-35s, but Ankara and Washington have publicly stated a desire to overcome this, saying the allies have the political will to do so.
The potential temporary waiver, if given, could help Ankara increase defense cooperation with Washington and possibly build sympathy in a US Congress that has been skeptical of Turkiye in the past, the sources said.
“Both sides know that resolving CAATSA needs to be done. Whether it is a presidential waiver or a congressional decision, that is up to the United States,” Harun Armagan, vice chair of foreign affairs for Erdogan’s ruling AK Party, told Reuters.
“It looks awkward with all of the other diplomacy and cooperation happening at the same time.”
Turkiye’s foreign ministry did not respond to questions about floating a waiver to US counterparts or discussions on resolving the S-400 issue. The White House did not immediately comment on whether Ankara raised a waiver option.
A State Department spokesperson said Trump recognizes Turkiye’s strategic importance and that “his administration is seeking creative solutions to all of these pending issues,” but did not elaborate further.
Asked about Turkiye’s separate agreement to buy 40 F-16s, an earlier generation fighter jet, a US source said that talks have been dogged by Turkish concerns about the price and desire to buy the more advanced F-35s instead.

TURKEY HAS DEVELOPED ITS OWN STEALTH FIGHTER
Frustrated by past hot-cold ties with the West and some arms embargoes, Turkiye has developed its own KAAN stealth fighter. Yet officials acknowledge it will take years before it replaces the F-16s that form the backbone of its air force. Jet upgrades are part of a broader effort to strengthen layered air defenses that also includes Turkiye’s domestic “Steel Dome” project and an expansion of long-range missile coverage.
Yanki Bagcioglu, an opposition CHP lawmaker and former Turkish Air Force brigadier general, said Turkiye must accelerate plans for KAAN, Eurofighter and F-16 jets.
“At present, our air-defense system is not at the desired level,” he said, blaming “project-management failures.”


Australian visa holders trapped in Gaza

Australian visa holders trapped in Gaza
Updated 54 min 2 sec ago

Australian visa holders trapped in Gaza

Australian visa holders trapped in Gaza
  • Estimated 600-700 people in Palestinian enclave hold Australian visas
  • Israel’s bordure closures have prevented exits

LONDON: Australian visa holders in Gaza remain trapped in the Palestinian enclave due to closed borders, with refugee advocates calling on the government to assist them, The Guardian reported on Wednesday.

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said 600-700 people in Gaza hold Australian visas, though it is uncertain how many are still alive after two years of war.

Israel has continued to prevent exits from the Rafah crossing, with the exception of a small number of evacuees who can leave on medical grounds.

Burke told ABC: “Some people in that number (of 600-700) will choose to stay, some people may end up with other options that they’d prefer to take, and there will be some people who we don’t hear from again — and there’s some on that case list that we haven’t heard from for a very long time.

“A significant number of them are part of split family groups where some of the family is in fact here in Australia, and they’re wanting to join.”

Australia’s government is doing “all it can to support Australians, permanent residents and their immediate family members still in Gaza who wish to depart,” a spokesperson said, adding that it is “coordinating with governments in the region” to facilitate the departure of Australian visa holders from Gaza, but exiting the territory “remains difficult.”

Sarah Dale of the Refugee Advice and Casework Service said of the Australian visa holders in Gaza who are eligible for consular assistance, border crossings “remain perilous” and “fraught,” adding: “It has required immense strength and courage of the people fleeing in order to get out.”