Final Britons rescued from war-torn Sudan as airbridge closed

The last Britons scrambling to go away Sudan departed from the war-torn nation on Saturday because the Government closed down its airbridge indefinitely.

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Around 1,573 UK nationals had been evacuated on 13 flights for the reason that plan started to extract folks per week in the past, though 1000's of individuals might have been disregarded of the programme.

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It comes amid criticism of the tempo of the evacuation, which was given extra time after a three-day extension to the ceasefire between warring Sudanese generals was agreed late on Thursday.

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On Saturday night time senior Army officers stated that warnings of the upcoming disaster had been given a full week earlier than the Foreign Office determined to behave.

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In one other twist, all NHS medical doctors had been deemed eligible to catch flights in a foreign country following a last-minute U-turn by the Gov­­ernment, which initially stated that evacuation was solely open to UK passport holders and their rapid households.

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READ MORE: Artillery fire rocks Khartoum to terror of Britons stranded in Sudan

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READ MORE: Artillery fireplace rocks Khartoum to terror of Britons stranded in Sudan

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Dr Abdulrahman Babiker was one among 20 NHS medics initially advised that they might not board flights as a result of they weren't British nationals, though they've UK work permits.

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Now evacuated, the Manchester Royal Infirmary physician stated: “I am happy that I am finally in a safe place, away from a war and on my way back to the UK. At the same time I feel down that my family are still endangered by this fighting in my country.”

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Deputy PM Oliver Dowden chaired a Cobra assembly prematurely of the ultimate flight, which left Wadi Seidna air base at 6pm UK time.

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British particular forces boarded US Chinook helicopters early final Sunday morning to airlift embassy workers out of Khartoum. But this was a full 15 days after chief of joint operations Lt Gen Charlie Stickland first briefed the Cabinet Office of navy intelligence of an impending eruption of violence between Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan’s authorities forces and the Rapid Support Forces, led by Gen Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.

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Those warnings had been repeated two days later however the Foreign Office allegedly remained “beset by inertia”.

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It took one other warning from Gen Stickland for the FCDO to grant approval to evacuate embassy workers.

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One senior officer at Permanent Joint HQ, in Northwood, London, stated: “The FCDO team could not make a decision between them. It was chaotic. This was poor, very poor.”

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Mr Dowden stated: “We are in touch with and engaging rapidly with the Sudanese Doctors’ Association to see what further support we can provide for them.”

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