Assista Secretary General of the United Nations: Foreign ierference is fueling the crisis in Sudan – Mehr News Agency | RCO News Agency

TheReferring to the developmes in Sudan, Elizabeth Marie Esbihar, Assista Secretary General of the United Nations, said that no area in Sudan is far from danger..
Declaring that the risk of committing mass disasters is very high in Sudan, especially in al-Fasher, he stated that the situation in Sudan is chaotic and it is difficult to estimate the number of civilian casualties..
Announcing that reports of atrocities committed by the rapid response forces in Bara in northern Kordofan have reached the United Nations, Marie Esbihar coinued: We call on all parties to take immediate measures to preve further atrocities in Sudan..
The senior UN official said the time has come to take the first step towards lasting peace for the people of Sudan.
Emphasizing that the United Nations was to stop foreign ierference in the conflict in Sudan, he said that foreign ierference fuels the conflicts..
He said coordination between Sudan’s iernational partners is necessary to end the war.
The Assista Secretary General of the United Nations said: We demand a permane and immediate solution to the conflicts in Sudan. The war in Sudan is devastating and we must stand with the Sudanese people.
Marie Esbihar poied out that rapid response forces are preveing aid from reaching al-Fasher, noting that al-Fasher has seen catastrophic levels of humanitarian disaster..
He announced that al-Fasher witnessed mass executions after the arrival of the rapid response forces, and the lack of support for civilians is one of the characteristics of the crisis in Sudan..
Since April 15, 2023, the Sudanese army and the support response forces have been engaged in a war that many regional and iernational mediators have not succeeded in ending. According to domestic and iernational reports, about 20,000 people have been killed and more than 15 million displaced in this war. This statistic was published while a study conducted by American universities estimated the number of dead to be around 130,000..



