The US announced Sudan’s two warring factions had agreed to a three-day ceasefire and raised the prospect of peace talks, even as the two sides showed little appetite for negotiations to end fighting that’s killed hundreds of people.
The leaders of the Sudanese Armed Forces and the rival Rapid Support Forces agreed to halt the fighting starting at midnight in Sudan — 6 p.m. Monday on the US East Coast — after “intense negotiation” over the last two days, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced the ceasefire, to begin at midnight local time Monday, after hundreds of people were killed and thousands wounded by the fighting in Khartoum.
Blinken, in a statement, said the U.S. urged the Sudanese Armed Forces and Rapid Support Forces to “immediately and fully uphold the ceasefire,” following more than a week of fighting where other attempts to halt hostilities have failed to take hold.
The secretary said the U.S. is working with regional, international and local civilian Sudanese partners to create a committee to “to oversee the negotiation, conclusion, and implementation of a permanent cessation of hostilities and humanitarian arrangements in Sudan.
“We will continue to work with the Sudanese parties and our partners toward the shared goal of a return to civilian government in Sudan,” the secretary said.
This is just as a Nigerian female student in Sudan has called on the Nigerian government to quickly come to their rescue as ‘bloody fighting’ between feuding military groups in the war-torn African country escalates.
The female student, while sobbing profusely and speaking in Hausa, said: “What kind of trouble is this? We are plenty more than others, and also lucky. But only Nigerian students are left.
“Everyone knows Nigeria has money, and everybody respects us. But we are the last people remaining here. Everyone else has gone. Because we are the ones that don’t have people that care for us.
“Allah, please bring us succour. What type of problem is this. Even if they don’t like us, let them assist us because of humanity. Our parents are there, and their minds are already agitated. Please, let them assist us. There is no more time left.”
Yet the leaders of Sudan’s army and the RSF paramilitary battling for control of Sudan have so far resisted renewed diplomatic efforts to bring them to the negotiating table.
While officials continue to call on army leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and Rapid Support Forces head Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo to put an end to the hostilities, neither of them is ready, according to two senior diplomats briefed on the matter.
Foreign governments are increasingly looking to the African Union and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development, a regional bloc, to lead mediation efforts as they may be able to bring the pressure of countries in the region to bear on the two men, the diplomats said.
That appeared to be confirmed by a statement from the RSF, which called the cease-fire a “humanitarian truce” to help civilians flee the violence. The RSF statement didn’t mention the prospect of talks to end the fighting for good.
The cease-fire is meant to “establish humanitarian corridors, allowing citizens and residents to access essential resources, health care, and safe zones, while also evacuating diplomatic missions,” the RSF said. “We pledge our commitment to uphold the cease-fire during the declared armistice and caution against any violations by the opposing party.”
The cease-fire announcement came after the American and UK armed forces evacuated embassy personnel from Khartoum, the Sudanese capital, and as other governments work to help diplomats and citizens fleeing the violence.
At a briefing earlier Monday, Blinken said the US is “deeply engaged” in trying to end the conflict. He said he’d spoken directly to Burhan and Dagalo as US officials engage counterparts from countries including Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt and the UK about efforts to agree a cease-fire.
“We strongly support African-led efforts to help both mediate this crisis, to end the hostilities,” Blinken told reporters.
The conflict is the culmination of a long-simmering power struggle between the army and the RSF, and upended plans for a power-sharing government that was supposed to lead the nation of about 45 million to democratic elections after a 2021 coup.
There was at least some hope that negotiators could move the rival armed groups from a temporary cease-fire toward a more durable peace.
“This initiative differs from its predecessors in that it is not only concerned with humanitarian issues, but rather it contained detailed issues and identified the necessary mechanisms to reach a final agreement,” said Khalid Omer Yousif, a spokesman for a coalition of pro-democracy groups who served as a former Sudanese government cabinet minister.