UK to end Sudan evacuation flights on Saturday

UK to end Sudan evacuation flights on Saturday
Deputy prime minister Oliver Dowden denied London was abandoning any Britons or their dependents in Sudan, after he announced the evacuation will cease at 1700 GMT on Saturday.
2 min read
The British government has coordinated a series of evacuation flights of British nationals from Khartoum, during a short ceasefire between rival military factions. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)

The UK said Friday it will end evacuation flights from Sudan for its citizens and their relatives on Saturday, after airlifting over 1,500 people out of the conflict-hit country so far this week.

The flights from the Wadi Saeedna airfield near the Sudanese capital Khartoum, which Britain began on Tuesday, will cease at 1700 GMT on Saturday, deputy prime minister Oliver Dowden told UK media.

In a separate statement, the Foreign Office said British nationals and their eligible immediate family wanting to leave should arrive at the airfield by 1000 GMT Saturday for processing.

Dowden said officials had seen "a significant decline" in the number of British nationals coming forward for evacuation over the last 24 hours.

"People should expect within the next 24 hours, so by six o'clock UK time tomorrow, for us to cease those flights," he added.

Dowden denied London was abandoning any Britons or their dependents in Sudan, insisting "every single British national that has come forward and their eligible dependents have been put safely onto a plane".

He noted that the UK will maintain consular support in the east African country at exit routes to the north to south as well as at the eastern city of Port Sudan.

MENA
Live Story

The Foreign Office said 1,573 people -- the vast majority British nationals and their eligible dependents -- had been evacuated so far since evacuation flights started late Tuesday.

The airlifts began after Sudan's warring parties agreed an initial three-day US-brokered ceasefire, which has since been formally extended though fierce fighting has resumed.

The Foreign Office vowed to "continue to press all diplomatic levers to secure a long term ceasefire and end to the bloodshed in Sudan".

"Ultimately a stable transition to civilian rule is the best way to protect the security and prosperity of the Sudanese people," it added.