Joint Statement on behalf of 41 countries on Sudan Humanitarian Access for the Item 4 General Debate. Delivered by the UK’s Permanent Representative to the WTO and the UN, Simon Manley.

Simon Manley CMG

Mr President,

This statement is on behalf of the Troika for Sudan – USA, Norway and the UK. It is supported by over 40 Member States of the UN.

We welcome the organisation of a humanitarian conference for Sudan and neighbouring countries next month in Paris, exactly one year since the beginning of a conflict that has had catastrophic humanitarian consequences for the Sudanese people.  

Nearly 18 million people are suffering crisis levels of food insecurity. Humanitarian workers are blocked from reaching the people in need.  The longer this conflict lasts, and the further fighting spreads, the greater that need will become.  We call on all parties to accept a Ramadan ceasefire, in line with Security Council Resolution 2724.​
The Sudanese Armed Forces’ (SAF) withdrawal of permission for aid deliveries through the major crossing points from Chad into Darfur is indefensible. It has exacerbated the suffering in Darfur, where civilians are already in dire need after suffering relentless atrocities by the Rapid Support Forces.

We call on the SAF to uphold fully their commitments to facilitate cross-line and cross-border operations, re-open fully the vital Adre crossing point, and refrain from any measures that prevent life-saving aid reaching those in need.  

The vital work of local responders, UN agencies, and international partners must be allowed to proceed. The warring parties must ensure the security of humanitarian actors and refrain from diverting life-saving supplies for themselves – and hold their personnel accountable when they go against these principles.

Mr President, ​

The death toll in Sudan is likely far greater than the 14,000 verified to date. Every day humanitarian assistance is prevented from reaching those in need, that number will rise, and the Sudanese people move further toward catastrophic levels of food insecurity.

We call on all parties to comply with their obligations under international humanitarian law and the Jeddah Declaration, and to allow full, rapid, safe, and unhindered cross-border and cross-line humanitarian access, so that we can, collectively, protect Sudan’s people from even more suffering and death. 

Thank you.

Statement on behalf of:

United Kingdom
Norway
United States of America
Germany
Liechtenstein
Belgium
Austria
Albania
Luxembourg
Ireland
Poland
Australia
Malta
Slovenia
New Zealand
Montenegro
Iceland
Canada
Netherlands
Denmark
Italy
Kyrgyzstan
Japan
North Macedonia
Finland
Croatia
Georgia
Lithuania
Spain
Switzerland
Portugal
France
Argentina
Slovakia
Republic of Korea
Ecuador
Sweden
Estonia
Cyprus
Romania
Czech Republic

Published 20 March 2024