Port Sudan ,May 5(Darfur 24)
Foreign Minister Hussein Awad Ali called on the Chadian government to stop fueling the war and the horrific violations committed by the Rapid Support Forces, as the cost of hostility to the Sudanese people and helping to shed their blood and honor is very high, and whoever “ignites a fire in Sudan will not be immune from it.”
Last week, Chadian Foreign Minister Mohamed Salih Nazif denied his country’s support for the Rapid Support Forces.
Foreign Minister-designate Hussein Awad Ali said, in a statement obtained by Darfur 24, that “Chadian support for the terrorist militia is clearer than daylight.” It includes allocating the airports of Umm Jars and Abéché to receive flights transporting weapons and military equipment for the militia from the UAE.”
He added: These flights have so far amounted to more than 400 flights, monitored by specialized national and international agencies, with details of the carrier aircraft, the routes they took, and the dates of their arrival and unloading, supported by satellite images.
He pointed out that the armed forces dealt with some convoys transporting weapons from Chad after they entered Sudanese territory.
The Minister revealed that in the past few days, the competent authorities monitored the arrival of military vehicles to Chad through the Cameroonian port of Douala, their final destination for the Rapid Support Forces through Chadian territory.
He accused Chad of arranging and coordinating the participation of Chadian mercenaries from countries from which Sudan can only be reached through Chad, as a large number of these mercenaries died while fighting for the Rapid Support Forces.
He said that Chad remained the headquarters of the militia leaders, where meetings and meetings were held, and where recruitment, loyalty purchases, and money were received.
He expressed his regret for what he described as the Chadian government’s dependence on external forces that had previously caused destruction, killing, and instability in many countries in the region, for the narrow self-interests of some Chadian officials.

