The UN calls on countries supplying weapons in Sudan to stop in the face of escalation in North Darfur

The UN calls on countries supplying weapons in Sudan to stop in the face of escalation in North Darfur
The UN calls on countries supplying weapons in Sudan to stop in the face of escalation in North Darfur

United Nations, April 29 (EFE).- The UN Security Council addressed this Monday the escalation of the conflict in North Darfur (Sudan), whose capital the paramilitary group Rapid Support Forces (FAR) is trying to take, and called on the arms supplying countries to stop the flow, according to the US ambassador.

The US ambassador to the UN, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, said after the meeting that she has “credible reports” that the FAR have “imminent” plans to attack Al Fasher, capital of North Darfur and the last bastion of the Army in the region, in which maintained that the population is “besieged.”

The diplomat noted that both sides in the conflict are receiving weapons and other resources to continue “destroying Sudan,” and assured that the members of the Security Council have addressed the issue with “the parties, and that includes colleagues from the UAE ( United Arab Emirates)”.

Asked what the UN decision-making body can do, Thomas-Greenfield said it has expressed “concern”, a term repeated in another intervention this afternoon by British ambassador James Kariuki, who reiterated the need for an “international message ” set.

“We have made a strong request to all countries that are providing support to the warring parties to cease that support, and we will continue to pressure those countries,” the American added.

Kariuki gave briefer statements in which he expressed the Council’s “concern” about the potential escalation in Al Fasher and the impact on its population, some two million people plus half a million displaced people concentrated there.

The town of Al Fasher “is on the precipice of a massacre,” warned Thomas Greenfield, while Kariuki pointed out the risk of famine due to the lack of humanitarian access given the “barriers” put in place by both parties, which they urged to return to the negotiation table in Jeddah (Saudi Arabia). EFE

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