© Provided by The National Empty shelves at a supermarket in Khartoum on Thursday (AFP)
The war in Sudan[1] and its human cost is expected to dominate deliberations at the Arab League summit when it opens in Saudi Arabia on Friday, with leaders taking the floor one after the other to call for the violence to stop and relief supplies to reach civilians.
But hundreds of kilometres away in Khartoum[2], the Sudanese capital ripped apart by the war, hardly anyone is looking to the summit for action that would give the city’s embattled residents a respite from the death and devastation upending their lives.
Indeed, on the eve of the summit in the Saudi Red Sea city of Jeddah, the army and the rival paramilitary Rapid Support Forces[3] (RSF) continued to fight it out on the streets of Khartoum, paying little heed to the Arab summit or an ongoing US-Saudi mediation effort to persuade them to agree and observe a ceasefire.
On Thursday, army jet fighters pounded RSF positions in the southern areas of Khartoum in air strikes that could be heard across much of the city, according to residents. Police battled the RSF on the ground, they said.
“The Arab League [summit] in Jeddah will only yield statements calling for a ceasefire in Sudan, but no concrete action,” said Khaled Hashem, 44, a resident of Khartoum’s Tayef district.
“We want to see a mechanism bringing together the United Nations and the African Union to pressure the two side into accepting a ceasefire.”
Disillusionment with the effectiveness of the Arab League has been growing for years, with many in the Arab world seeing the Cairo-based organisation as strong on rhetoric and short on action.
The perceived weakness of the Arab League, founded more than 75 years ago, has given rise to more effective and dynamic alliances within the Arab world, such as the Gulf Co-operation Council and the now-dormant Arab Maghreb Union. More recently, like-minded Arab leaders have formed four or five-nation axes with the focus on trade and economic integration.
The Arab League, moreover, has a poor track record on past civil wars in Sudan in which millions were killed or displaced in the nearly 70 years since independence.
For example, it was the Intergovernmental Authority on Development, a regional African grouping, that mediated an end to Sudan's 22-year civil war in the south of the country in 2005. The previous war between the north and south of Sudan ended in 1972 with an agreement mediated by church groups and signed in Ethiopia. In 2019, Ethiopia played a key role in setting up a power-sharing deal between the military and civilian groups after the ousting of dictator Omar Al Bashir.
“Judging by past experiences, you cannot rely on the Arab League. All I can expect from the summit in Jeddah is a declaration of solidarity with the people of Sudan or support for the US-Saudi mediation,” said Mohammed Abdel Aziz, 40, a resident of Omdurman, one of Khartoum’s two adjoining cities.
“It may be too late even for that. The Sudan crisis has become too complex and may not be resolved any time soon,” he said.
The violence in Sudan flared on April 15 and quickly spread to the Darfur region in western Sudan and later to Kordofan State, also in the west. But the war stayed focused in Khartoum, where heavy weaponry has been used.
The fighting has also caused shortages of power, water and food. Most of the city’s hospitals are not running and those that are open are operating on significantly reduced capacity. Pockets of hunger have also emerged.
The fighting is rooted in a power struggle between one-time allies, army chief Gen Abdel Fattah Al Burhan and RSF commander Mohamed Dagalo. Both men are thought to be in Khartoum.
According to the latest estimates, more than 840,000 people have been displaced in Sudan and more than 220,000 have fled to neighbouring countries.
The UN said on Wednesday that more than half of Sudan's 46 million population needed humanitarian assistance and protection, launching a $3 billion aid appeal. It also said it had received reports of "horrific gender-based violence" in Sudan.
Several ceasefires declared since the fighting broke out were all ignored.
“The Arab League often takes a middle course so as not to upset any party. In this case, it will likely try not to be seen as supporting the army or the RSF,” said Karamallah Mohammed, a Khartoum resident.
Significantly, Gen Al Burhan and Gen Dagalo each have regional supporters, something that feeds into Mr Mohammed’s argument regarding the Arab League’s tendency not to take sides in the internal disputes of its member nations.
“You can expect that the summit’s Sudan resolution will reiterate the general principles contained in international and regional declarations since April 15,” said Mohamed Anis Salem, a former career diplomat with decades of experience in the Middle East.
“There is no appetite for more advanced steps, like assigning a special envoy, creating an observer group or a peacekeeping mission,” said Mr Salem, who sits on the Egyptian Council for Foreign Relations, a think tank in Cairo.
“The focus will be on co-ordination with other efforts as well as Utopian calls for calm and negotiations.”
References
Newer articles:
- How blind football league is helping restore hope in South Sudan - 19/05/2023 08:29
- South Sudan lags behind in road connectivity - 19/05/2023 07:25
- US reissues South Sudan sanctions regulations - 19/05/2023 04:31
- Sudan war locks depositors out of savings - 19/05/2023 03:56
- Sudan protests visit of RSF advisor to Juba - 19/05/2023 02:47
Older news items
- More than 1m people displaced by Sudan crisis: UN refugee agency - 19/05/2023 00:43
- South Sudan Operation Overview - March 2023 - 18/05/2023 09:18
- South Sudanese Diocese Spearheading Peace Initiative, Priest Says Communities “impressed” - 18/05/2023 08:34
- Field Hospital in South Sudan celebrate President Ho Chi Minh’s birthday - 18/05/2023 05:11
- 'Stop the nonsense' - Kenyan leader tells Sudan generals - 18/05/2023 03:47
Latest news items (all categories):
- How Collo’s Selfish Education Negatively Affects Society - 17/05/2025 21:06
- Museveni Launches Regional Road Project Linking Uganda, South Sudan & Central African Republic - 17/05/2025 20:08
- AMECEA And SSSCBC Host Three-Day Constitution Review Workshop in South Sudan - 17/05/2025 20:03
- ‘Knives Are Out’ in South Sudan as Vice President Is Held in Detention - 17/05/2025 19:09
- UN Security Council Should Renew South Sudan Arms Embargo - 17/05/2025 19:03
Random articles (all categories):
- South Sudan struggling to meet needs of people: UN - 05/12/2013 08:54
- Assem A. Abulkhair vs The Federal Bureau of Investigation, et al - 07/03/2025 15:02
- Sweden charges Lundin Energy executives with complicity in South Sudan/Sudan war crimes - 12/11/2021 05:04
- She bears witness to South Sudan's turbulence, one headline at a time - 04/10/2018 08:43
- Kenya police: 4 men arrested in South Sudan going to join IS - 09/05/2017 17:37
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 103162 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 22647 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 22095 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 21020 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 19547 times