British mission in Sudan ‘not over’ regardless of finish of airlift, says Cleverly
he British mission in Sudan is “not over yet” regardless of the tip of the evacuation airlift, the Foreign Secretary stated.
James Cleverly stated the state of affairs remained harmful and officers had been nonetheless in Port Sudan to assist Britons searching for to depart the nation.
The ultimate evacuation flights left Sudan on Monday for Cyprus, with anybody searching for to depart now counting on making their very own solution to security by means of Port Sudan or at land borders into neighbouring international locations.
During the airlift – the longest and largest operation undertaken by any Western nation in Sudan – some 2,341 folks had been evacuated on 28 flights, the PA news company understands.
Mr Cleverly informed GB News: “There is still an ongoing humanitarian situation, we still have a presence at Port Sudan, both a military presence and a number of other government officials to help British nationals and their dependents leave the country.”
He added: “We will ensure that we maintain a presence to support British nationals, because the situation in Sudan, sadly, is still volatile, and it is still dangerous.”
As nicely as officers and navy personnel in Port Sudan, HMS Lancaster is off the coast to help them.
Mr Cleverly stated the evacuation from Sudan would have a “significant” price to taxpayers.
But he informed LBC Radio: “What we have found increasingly now, as people use those land routes to Port Sudan, in many instances they are less in need of an air evacuation from Sudan itself.
“There are a number of options available from Port Sudan, including a ferry across to Saudi Arabia.”
He added: “At the moment we have a warship just off the coast of Port Sudan, we have a cross-Whitehall team of officials in Port Sudan to help British nationals leave the country.
“We can scale that up, or indeed scale that down, according to circumstances.”
The worldwide focus is shifting to stopping a wider humanitarian disaster within the area and Mr Cleverly warned that any additional preventing would hamper aid efforts.
The United Nations stated Sudanese military chief General Abdel Fattah Burhan and his rival General Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, the top of a paramilitary group often known as the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), have agreed to ship representatives to the negotiation desk in a bid to determine a extra secure truce.
Generals Burhan and Dagalo, each with highly effective international backers, had been allies in an October 2021 navy coup that halted Sudan’s fraught transition to democracy, however they’ve since turned on one another.
Mr Cleverly informed BBC Radio 4’s Today: “Where there is live conflict, our ability to provide… humanitarian support is massively degraded.”
He added: “We have given aid to Sudan, we are giving support to countries in the region, we will continue to push for an extension of the ceasefire and a permanent end to the conflict because that is the best way to maximise the effectiveness of our humanitarian support.”