Sudanese rue shattered dreams as war enters second year

Sudanese students, who mostly came to Egypt after the war in Sudan, walk to their school, in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, April 17, 2024. (AP)
Sudanese students, who mostly came to Egypt after the war in Sudan, walk to their school, in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, April 17, 2024. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 19 April 2024
Follow

Sudanese rue shattered dreams as war enters second year

Sudanese rue shattered dreams as war enters second year
  • Bashir’s ouster in April 2019 ushered in a civilian-led transition that saw an outpouring of “hope, inspiration and vibrancy” among young Sudanese, said Samah Salman, who worked in corporate venture capital then

DUBAI: Lawyer Omar Ushari still remembers the hope that gripped Khartoum after the uprising that overthrew President Omar Bashir in 2019. Now, after a year of war between rival generals, much of the Sudanese capital lies in ruins.
The 46-year-old, then detained for his activism, celebrated behind bars when Bashir was toppled in a palace coup.
In the heady days that followed, as the army promised a transition to elective civilian rule, Ushari was released and set to work on his dream project: a literary cafe near the banks of the Nile.
Named Rateena, his cafe swiftly became known as a safe haven for young activists eager to contribute to building a “better Sudan.”
But on April 15 last year, the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces went to war, and Ushari watched both his project and his dreams for the country “fade, bit by bit.”

BACKGROUND

Omar Bashir’s ouster in April 2019 ushered in a civilian-led transition that saw an outpouring of ‘hope, inspiration and vibrancy’ among young Sudanese, says Samah Salman, who worked in corporate venture capital then.

For months, he braved raging street battles to visit Rateena, “sit in the dark, take stock of what had been looted since my last visit, and reminisce.”
He did not understand how “the music that filled the space, the lectures and debates people shared, had been replaced with stray bullets strewn around me and the sound of tank fire outside.”
Now, as the war has entered its second year, with thousands dead and millions more driven from their homes, Ushari says he is “only one of the thousands of dreams shattered” — a microcosm of “a stolen revolution.”
Bashir’s ouster in April 2019 ushered in a civilian-led transition that saw an outpouring of “hope, inspiration and vibrancy” among young Sudanese, said Samah Salman, who worked in corporate venture capital then.
Startups were “springing up all across Sudan,” she said from the US, “all building extraordinary solutions to real needs ordinary Sudanese people were facing.”
Salman reviewed over 50 startups in telehealth, agritech, renewable energy, logistics, and fintech solutions, crediting the boom to “the energy of the revolution.”
According to Ushari, “hopes were high that Sudan was finally on the right path, out of the shadows and heading toward democracy, toward freedom.”
Like countless others, communications expert Raghdan Orsud, 36, wanted to play her part.
She co-founded Beam Reports to investigate disinformation in Sudan — “out of the belief in the role media can play in democratic transition,” she said from London.
But that transition ended in October 2021, two months after Beam Reports launched.
The same generals who would later go to war — army chief Gen. Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and his then-deputy RSF commander Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo — ousted civilians from the transitional administration.
“Nothing was the same after the coup,” Ushari said.
“It was a painful time. They were killing protesters every week, but still, we had hope.”
Then, one fateful Saturday at the end of Ramadan, the people of Khartoum awoke to the sounds of air strikes and shelling as their worst fears came true: the erstwhile allies had turned their guns on each other.
Bodies began piling up on the streets as vicious urban warfare drove millions to flee.
Orsud had just bought studio-grade recording equipment, “still in their boxes,” when RSF paramilitaries seized and looted her offices.
Ushari was piecing together a life in Cairo when he received a video message showing a massive fire.
“That’s how I found out Rateena had burned down,” he said.
Countless Sudanese in the diaspora — who had spent decades saving up to build their Khartoum homes — have been forced to watch from afar as the RSF looted them.
“At some point, he was praying for an airstrike to hit the house,” pastry chef Shaimaa Adlan, 29, said in Cairo, referring to her father in Saudi Arabia.
“He would have rather seen it destroyed than know his life’s work was being used as a paramilitary base.”
Adlan had started a catering business in Khartoum before finding herself in Egypt — uprooted and jobless.
But barely a year later, she sprints through a bustling kitchen in Cairo, shouting orders to her staff and fussing over dishes.
Back home, Salman says the war has not crushed Sudanese entrepreneurialism, just redirected it.
She said tech entrepreneurs now crowdsource real-time safety updates instead of protest plans and optimize evacuation paths instead of delivery routes.
The same young people organizing demonstrations now coordinate aid, becoming what the UN calls “the front line” of humanitarian response.
And in displacement centers and the diaspora, the dream of a new Sudan has not been forgotten.
“No matter where we’ve been exiled or what remote Sudanese state we’ve ended up in, there’s still a spark of the revolution left in every heart,” Ushari said.
“Sudan is ours, it’s all of ours,” said Orsud, whose fact-checking team has resumed operations from Nairobi.
“What else would we do besides rebuild it, over and over?“

 


BRICS New Development Bank authorizes Algeria to join

BRICS New Development Bank authorizes Algeria to join
Updated 31 August 2024
Follow

BRICS New Development Bank authorizes Algeria to join

BRICS New Development Bank authorizes Algeria to join
  • Bangladesh, Egypt, the UAE and Uruguay were admitted as new members of the bank in 2021

CAPE TOWN: Algeria has been authorized to become a member of the BRICS New Development Bank (NDB), the bank’s president, Dilma Rousseff, said on Saturday.
A multilateral development bank, the NDB was established by the BRICS group of developing countries — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — in 2015.
Bangladesh, Egypt, the UAE and Uruguay were admitted as new members of the bank in 2021 as part of an expansion drive.
“We have a process to authorize new members to the bank ... Algeria was authorized to become a member of the bank,” Rousseff told journalists on the sidelines of the ninth annual meeting of the bank in Cape Town.


Head of Jordan’s royal court visits evacuated Gazan girl in hospital

Head of Jordan’s royal court visits evacuated Gazan girl in hospital
Updated 31 August 2024
Follow

Head of Jordan’s royal court visits evacuated Gazan girl in hospital

Head of Jordan’s royal court visits evacuated Gazan girl in hospital
  • Lamis Attar is being treated at Al-Hussein Medical Center

AMMAN: The head of Jordan’s royal court on Saturday visited a young Gazan girl who is being treated at a hospital in the Kingdom after being evacuated from her home.

Yousef Issawi met Lamis Attar at Al-Hussein Medical Center, the Jordan News Agency reported. The youngster was evacuated along with her mother from Deir Al-Balah on Thursday under a royal decree.

Deputizing for King Abdullah II, Issawi extended the monarch’s best wishes for a speedy recovery to Attar and her mother.

Royal Medical Services director-general Yousef Zureikat said the child had undergone a successful surgery on Friday.

Attar’s mother thanked King Abdullah for rescuing her daughter and the medical care she had received. She also expressed her gratitude for the medical aid provided by Jordan to the people of Gaza.


Egypt bolsters defenses against cholera threat

Egypt bolsters defenses against cholera threat
Updated 31 August 2024
Follow

Egypt bolsters defenses against cholera threat

Egypt bolsters defenses against cholera threat
  • New guidelines for diagnosis, treatment issued as outbreaks continue across region
  • Cairo ‘fully prepared to respond to any emergency,’ health official says

CAIRO: Egypt has introduced new measures to tackle cholera despite having not recorded any recent cases, amid growing reports of outbreaks in neighboring countries, including Sudan.

The guidelines for diagnosing and treating the disease were announced by the Ministry of Health and Population.

“We have implemented health surveillance measures, particularly for passengers, transport and goods arriving from countries affected by cholera,” ministry official Dr. Gamal Hussein told Arab News.

“The first step is screening passengers and crew on all regular, charter and cargo flights coming from cholera-affected countries, directly or indirectly.

“Suspected cases will be referred to a designated hospital for evaluation and the preventive medicine department, general administration of quarantine and the relevant health affairs directorate will be notified immediately,” he said.

“We will implement the highest level of infection control measures when handling suspected cases.”

Any food and beverages entering the country would be destroyed unless stored in sealed, tamper-proof containers and not suspected of contamination, Hussein said.

“If a suspected case is found, the means of transport will be disinfected and any waste from the transport will be treated as hazardous and disposed of safely under quarantine supervision.”

Egypt was also ready to care for anyone who might arrive in the country already infected with the disease, he said.

“Patients infected with cholera will be admitted to fever hospitals, where contact isolation precautions will be enforced and they will be placed in a single room with a dedicated bathroom.

“The situation in Egypt is safe at present but we are fully prepared to respond to any emergency.”

Health Ministry spokesperson Dr. Hossam Abdel Ghaffar said: “Cholera is a severe bacterial infection. It can lead to rapid dehydration and loss of salts from the body within hours if not treated promptly.

“Most people infected with cholera show no symptoms or have only mild symptoms and they can be effectively treated with oral rehydration solutions.

“In the 19th century, cholera spread globally from its original reservoir in the Ganges Delta in India, leading to six worldwide pandemics that caused millions of deaths,” he told Arab News

According to a statement from the Health Ministry, there are between 1.3 million and 4 million cholera cases reported each year around the world, with 21,000 to 43,000 deaths.

The rapid spread of outbreaks is primarily attributed to its short incubation period of between two and five days, it said.

In the first seven months of this year, 307,233 cases and 2,326 deaths were reported to the World Health Organization, the ministry said.


Flooding, landslides kill 27 in Yemeni village

Flooding, landslides kill 27 in Yemeni village
Updated 31 August 2024
Follow

Flooding, landslides kill 27 in Yemeni village

Flooding, landslides kill 27 in Yemeni village
  • Since late July, severe rains have affected several areas of Yemen, notably the central highlands and western provinces

AL-MUKALLA: Torrential rains caused a landslide in Al-Jaref village in Dhamar province on Friday night, killing at least 27 people and leaving two missing, local media said on Saturday. This was the second deadly landslide in Yemen in less than a week.

Houthi media reported that the landslide also damaged or destroyed 23 houses in the hillside village.

Locals said that at least two dozen individuals were trapped inside two homes as a landslide caused by the collapse of a hilltop dam swept them away.

The bodies of at least 10 people were discovered in Dhamar hours after the landslide.

Elsewhere, local authorities in the district of Melhan in the northern province of Mahweet say communities in flood-affected areas remain isolated, putting inhabitants in danger of starvation if food supplies run out.

According to the UN Population Fund, landslides caused by the collapse of three dams ripped through several highland villages in Melhan on Tuesday night, leaving 41 people missing, affecting 1,020 families, destroying 40 homes, and partially damaging 230 others.

Local authorities say that the floods swept away some roads and obstructed others, making it impossible for even donkeys to access the stranded communities.

Abdul Kareem Adham, a member of Melhan local council, said on Facebook that people were “surviving on biscuits” as food supplies run low in the Al-Qibla area.

Since late July, severe rains have affected several areas of Yemen, notably the central highlands and western provinces, causing massive floods that have swept away houses and their inhabitants, submerged residential areas, and devastated roads, water pipelines, and other infrastructure.

In an update released on Friday, the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, said that, over the last month, floods in Yemen have killed 97 people, wounded many more, affected more than 56,000 households in 20 Yemeni districts, and displaced over 1,000 families. The provinces of Hodeidah, Hajjah, and Marib have been most adversely affected.

Local estimates suggest the number of fatalities from floods and lightning strikes since late July stands at more than 120, with 84 in the Red Sea city of Hodeidah alone.

Residents of Hodeidah said that the flooding had altered the path of watercourses and had reached residential areas on the city’s outskirts.

Meanwhile, an explosion swept through a gas station in the southern city of Aden on Friday night, killing two and injuring at least 17 others, local officials said.

Salah Al-Akel, deputy governor of Aden, told Arab News that flames erupted at a gas station when a gas truck was emptying its cargo, triggering an explosion that killed two people, including a worker and an unidentified person, and injured 17, five of whom are still in hospital.

He said municipal officials had blocked gas stations in the city and will carry out safety inspections before allowing them to reopen.

“We decided to permit the sale of gas at fuel stations, but that the gas-only stations that have recently proliferated around the city would be closed, owing to a lack of safety rules,” Al-Akel said.


‘Humanitarian pause’ for polio vaccines in Gaza not good enough, says UK-based aid agency

‘Humanitarian pause’ for polio vaccines in Gaza not good enough, says UK-based aid agency
Updated 31 August 2024
Follow

‘Humanitarian pause’ for polio vaccines in Gaza not good enough, says UK-based aid agency

‘Humanitarian pause’ for polio vaccines in Gaza not good enough, says UK-based aid agency
  • The campaign, which involves two doses, aims to cover more than 640,000 children under 10

LONDON: A temporary pause in fighting in Gaza for a polio vaccination roll-out must lead to a permanent ceasefire for it to be beneficial, a UK aid agency has said.

A health official in the enclave said a polio vaccination campaign had begun on Saturday after the war-torn territory recorded its first case of the disease in a quarter of a century.

Local health officials along with the UN and nongovernmental organizations “are starting today the polio vaccination campaign in the central region,” Moussa Abed, director of primary health care at the Gaza health ministry, said.

Action For Humanity, one of the leading aid agencies working in Gaza, called for the agreed humanitarian pause to be made permanent, otherwise it would prove to be counterproductive.

“Whilst we at Action For Humanity welcome the temporary halt in violence in order for polio vaccinations to be distributed, it is not even nearly enough,” Othman Moqbel, Action For Humanity’s CEO, said.

“In reality, a temporary humanitarian pause is no humanitarian pause at all. Only a permanent pause will serve the spiraling needs of the people of Gaza.

“And it has been shown it can be done. If this war can be stopped to stop children dying from polio, why can the war not be stopped to stop children dying from war?” he added.

The World Health Organization said on Thursday that Israel had agreed to a series of three-day “humanitarian pauses” in Gaza to facilitate vaccinations.

The campaign, which involves two doses, aims to cover more than 640,000 children under 10.