How U.S. Efforts to Guide Sudan to Democracy Ended in War
Critics say the Biden administration and its partners were naïve about the intentions of two rival generals and failed to empower civilian leaders.
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Critics say the Biden administration and its partners were naïve about the intentions of two rival generals and failed to empower civilian leaders.
A grisly trial in Serbia has raised questions about connections between the country’s top leadership and its violent drug gangs.
The fragile peace that quieted years of genocidal violence in Darfur is at risk again.
Civilians boarded buses leaving Sudan’s capital to escape the fighting between two rival generals that has killed hundreds of people.
Officials and citizens of other nations were airlifted from Sudan, where hundreds of people have been killed and thousands of others injured in violence between warring generals.
With hopes fading that two warring generals will end their battle anytime soon, diplomats and other foreigners began heading for Sudan’s doors.
A blast in Belgorod, near the Ukrainian border, was the result of “an accidental discharge of aviation ammunition,” Russia’s Defense Ministry said.
With two generals vying for power, residents in the capital, Khartoum, said the violence had destroyed hospitals, airfields and homes, and left civilians caught in the crossfire.
The army and the paramilitary group it is battling agreed to a 24-hour cease-fire. But many residents were unsure whether the truce was solid enough to safely flee.
Footage from the Sudanese Armed Forces shows dozens of students and school personnel being evacuated after they were trapped on the campus for four days.