♦ Sudan: This week’s news in brief ♦
A compact digest of this week’s most-read highlights, from the heart of Sudan
A compact digest of this week's most-read highlights, from the heart of Sudan.
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Sudanese authorities cancel ‘exit visa’
August 3 – 2020 KHARTOUM The federal Ministry of Interior Affairs in Khartoum announced that Sudanese people do not need to acquire an exit visa anymore to leave the country.
“This decision allows citizens to go directly to airports and land ports and travel to their destinations, without any prior procedures or fees,” said police spokesperson Maj Gen Omar Abdelmajeed of the General Passports and Immigration Directorate.
The authorities will only check the travellers’ passports from August 1 onward. People can only be prohibited from travelling after judicial procedures, the official said.
He also confirmed that mothers accompanying their children on a travel abroad, will not need prior consent of their husbands or other male relatives anymore.
Gunmen attack South Darfur village, kill RSF officer
August 3 – 2020 KASS A large group of gunmen approached Boronga village in Kass locality in South Darfur on Sunday morning. They collided with two battalions of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) tasked with protecting the village. During a fierce shooting an RSF officer was killed.
At least 11 villagers and four RSF soldiers sustained bullet wounds.
At a meeting in Nyala with the South Darfur Security Committee, headed by the state police chief, Kass activists and community leaders demanded better protection. The police chief replied that he does not have suitable vehicles to do so, one of the activists who attended the meeting told Radio Dabanga.
Military, SPLM-N El Hilu accuse each other of attacking civilians
Pompeo calls Hamdok about removing Sudan from US terror list
Floods destroy bridge, roads, houses in eastern Sudan
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