Live
Live

Large numbers of other people have been making the exhausting daylong drive across the desert to access points out of the country – to the city of Port Sudan on the eastern Red Sea coast and to the Arqin crossing into Egypt at the northern border.

Crowds of Sudanese and foreigners have waited in Port Sudan, trying to register for a ferry to Saudi Arabia. Dallia Abdelmoniem, a Sudanese political commentator, said she and her family arrived on Monday and have been trying to get a spot. “Priority was given to foreign nationals,” she said.

She and some of her extended family, mostly women and children, took a 26-hour bus journey to reach the port, during which they passed military checkpoints and small villages where people offered them cold hibiscus juice.

“These folk have very little, but they offered every single passenger on all these buses and trucks something to make their journey better,” she said.

At the Arqin crossing, families have been spending nights outside in the desert, waiting to be let into Egypt. Buses have lined up at the crossing.

“It’s a mess – long lines of elderly people, patients, women and children waiting in miserable conditions,” said Moaz al-Ser, a Sudanese teacher who arrived along with his wife and three children at the border a day earlier.

Tens of thousands of Khartoum residents have also fled to neighboring provinces or even into already existing camps within Sudan that house survivors of past conflicts.