♦ Sudan: This week’s news in brief ♦
A compact digest of the past week’s most-read highlights, from the heart of Sudan.
A compact digest of the past week’s most-read highlights, from the heart of Sudan.
Sudan’s Ministry of Livestock has announced large losses due to the continued closure of ports, roads, and infrastructure in the east of the country, estimated at $83 million within one month.
A group of 10 parties and movements allied under the name Forces for Freedom and Change-the Founding Platform (FFC-FP) signed the Charter for the Unity of the Forces for Freedom and Change in the Friendship Hall in Khartoum on Saturday, while large demonstrations started in the city. The protestors set up tents on the roads …
Charter for the Unity of the Forces for Freedom and Change signed in Sudan capital Read More »
Elementary and secondary school students demonstrated in the North Darfur capital El Fasher on Sunday, in protest against the high prices of bread, tuition fees, transportation tariffs, and the high prices of drinking water.
Sudan is facing the worst and most dangerous crisis, that threatens the transition, and even threatens the entire country, Prime Minister Abdallah Hamdok emphasised in an address to the Sudanese nation on Friday evening.