Sudan warns of looming food and medicine crisis
The Sudanese government has warned of a looming shortage of essential medicine and strategic goods including food, after protesters blocked main transport routes for imports.
The past few weeks have seen protesters in eastern Sudan block movement of supplies from the main port on the Red Sea coast in the city of Port Sudan, to pressure Khartoum to implement a number of political demands.
They have been demonstrating against what they describe as the deteriorating political and economic conditions in the region.
The Sudanese cabinet has said preventing transport of essential medicine and goods is a “crime” against millions of citizens.
The government said the country’s stock of life-saving medicines and intravenous solutions is about to run out as the closure of the port and the national road has hindered the arrival of imported shipments.
The closure of the transport route will likely lead to a shortage of fuel and wheat, leading to a low production of bread and electricity generation and supply.
For more than three weeks, the crisis in eastern Sudan has escalated, resulting in major security, political and economic tensions in the country.
The group and its leader, Muhammad Al-Amin Turk, claim they were marginalised in the Sudan peace negotiations, which resulted in the signing of the peace agreement in October 2020.
A group from eastern Sudan participated in the negotiations, but the Turk group rejected this mandate.
Initially, the Turk group made demands related to local matters such as differences over the region’s representatives who signed the agreement.
However, last Friday, Turk, a member of the National Congress Party which was headed by ousted President Omar al-Bashir, added more demands, including the cancellation of the constitutional document, the dissolution of the government and the Empowerment Committee.
A member of the Sovereign Council and head of the Revolutionary Front which signed the Sudanese peace agreement, Al-Hadi Idris, announced that responding to Turk’s demands would lead to a complete collapse of the peace process in the country.
The Sudanese government acknowledged that the issue of the east of the country is a fair issue and a national priority, and indicated that its solution is primarily political.
EA/Olajumoke Adeleke