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Neither of Sudan's warring factions has accepted truce plan, Trump advisor says
Neither Sudanese Armed Forces nor Rapid Support Forces have formally accepted the U.S.-backed ceasefire plan amid ongoing conflict and mutual distrust, envoy Massad Boulos said.
- On Tuesday, Massad Boulos said neither the Sudanese Armed Forces nor the Rapid Support Forces formally accepted the U.S. strong truce plan presented in Abu Dhabi.
- The proposal built on a September text submitted to the SAF and RSF amid a war that began in April 2023, causing famine, ethnic killings and mass displacement.
- The army returned preconditions that adviser Massad Boulos called impossible to achieve, the RSF declared a unilateral 'humanitarian truce' for three months, and the army objected to UAE participation and demanded RSF withdraw from civilian areas.
- The UN estimates 90,000 people have fled as aid groups struggle, Amnesty International and Sudan Doctors Network report war crimes and abductions, and it remains unclear if any truce holds.
- Previous mediation by the United States, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates has failed, while army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan called the U.S. proposal 'the worst' and the UAE denies arming the RSF.
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32 Articles
32 Articles
The leader of the Sudanese army Abdel Fattah al-Burhane, at war against the paramilitaries of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), called on US President Donald Trump to put an end to the conflict, in a forum published on Wednesday in the American newspaper Wall Street Journal.
·Montreal, Canada
Read Full ArticleThe conflict in Sudan continues. Sudan expert Kurtz explains the current situation.
·Zürich, Switzerland
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Total News Sources32
Leaning Left13Leaning Right3Center6Last UpdatedBias Distribution59% Left
Bias Distribution
- 59% of the sources lean Left
59% Left
L 59%
C 27%
14%
Factuality
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