Sudan ‘pathway to peace’ talks in London bring together EU, UK and AU

AFP Two women and a child are on a dusty piece of ground in front of a cart with their belongings.AFP

Tens of thousands of people have been forced to flee a camp in Darfur in the wake of the most recent attacks

A high-level international conference is due to get under way in London to find “a pathway to peace” in Sudan, hosted by the UK’s Foreign Secretary David Lammy.

Sudan’s civil war began exactly two years ago causing what aid agencies call the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

The UK is promising an extra $120m (£91m) worth of food and medical assistance.

Charities say 30 million people, many who are facing hunger, desperately need humanitarian aid.

Tuesday’s ministerial conference is co-chaired by the UK, EU and African Union.

Officials say the aim is to unite international partners around a common position, to get more food and medicine into Sudan and find what Lammy calls a “pathway to peace”.

Neither of Sudan’s main warring parties – the Sudanese Armed Forces nor RSF – has been invited.

They will be represented instead by regional allies, some of whom diplomats say are fuelling the conflict. Among them is the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which is accused of arming the RSF, something it denies.

The war – a power struggle between the army and the RSF – began on 15 April 2023, after the leaders of the army and RSF fell out over the political future of the country.

Map showing which group controls which part of Sudan

More BBC stories on Sudan:

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