![]() Please consider when placing your pre-order that you are reserving stock, which we are also charged processing fee's on. Pre-Order, Cancellation and Non-Refundable Deposits ![]() This does not affect your statutory rights as a consumer, nor is it intended to exclude our liability to you resulting from our negligence. In any cases, we shall have no liability to pay any money to you by way of compensation other than any refund we make under these conditions. ![]() We reserve the right to take 14 days to process the refund payment. These can then either be refunded or exchanged, as per your request. “WFP is rapidly resuming our programmes to provide the life-saving assistance that many so desperately need right now,” executive director Cindy McCain wrote on Twitter.If for any reason you are unhappy with the product and wish to return or exchange it, you need to contact us Within 14 days of receiving of the goods, via email us at and we will arrange for the return. The WFP paused operations after the death of three team members on the first day of fighting. On Monday, the World Food Programme said it would lift the suspension of operations in Sudan with immediate effect. The “obvious solution” would be to stop the fighting, he said. “We are exploring urgent ways to bring in and distribute additional supplies,” Mr Griffiths said. However, rampant looting of humanitarian offices and warehouses has depleted most of the UN's supplies, he said. “I am on my way to the region to explore how we can bring immediate relief to the millions of people whose lives have turned upside down overnight,” he said on Sunday. Mr Griffiths was the UN envoy to Yemen until 2021. UN emergency relief co-ordinator Martin Griffiths, who will serve as the envoy, said Sudan's humanitarian situation was reaching a breaking point. “The scale and speed of what is unfolding is unprecedented in Sudan … we are extremely concerned,” UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said. With hospitals bombed, medicines running low and many doctors fleeing the country, “it is a disaster in every sense of the word”, Ahmed Al Mandhari, WHO regional director for the eastern Mediterranean, told AFP. The fighting has pushed Sudan's already “extremely fragile” healthcare system to the verge of disaster, a World Health Organisation official said on Monday. The death toll continued to rise, with reports emerging of hospitals and blood banks being looted, and ambulances being prevented from reaching their destinations.įleeing war at home, Sudanese speak of hardship and horror Mr Guterres' decision comes after successive 72-hour ceasefires were breached by the RSF and Sudan's army. On Sunday, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said he would send an envoy to Sudan given the “unprecedented” situation the country is going through. So far, only the military has announced it is prepared to join negotiations, with no public word from its opponent, the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF). The talks would focus on establishing a “stable and reliable” ceasefire monitored by “national and international observers”, Mr Perthes told AP. ![]() The UN's senior official in the country said on Monday that the warring sides had agreed to send representatives for negotiations, possibly in Saudi Arabia, but the logistics were still being worked out. Both sides have agreed to and ignored a series of ceasefires, despite calls for a lull to allow civilians to seek safety and receive humanitarian assistance. The heaviest fighting, including artillery fire and aerial bombardment, has been reported in the capital Khartoum and the western region of Darfur. The briefings follow increasingly grim warnings from UN agencies about the impact of the conflict on the impoverished country of 45 million. “It has been more than two weeks of devastating fighting in Sudan, a conflict that is turning Sudan's humanitarian crisis into a full blown catastrophe,” Abdou Dieng said via video link. The UN humanitarian co-ordinator in Sudan warned that the humanitarian crisis was turning into a “full blown catastrophe” and that the risk of spillover into neighbouring countries was worrying. Mr Mazou said about 73,000 people had already fled to Sudan's seven neighbours - South Sudan, Chad, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Central African Republic and Libya - since fighting between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces began on April 15 The estimate includes about 580,000 Sudanese, while the others are existing refugees living temporarily in the country, he said “In consultation with all concerned governments and partners we've arrived at a planning figure of 815,000 people that may flee into the seven neighbouring countries,” Raouf Mazou, Assistant High Commissioner for Refugees, said at a UN member state briefing in Geneva. More than 800,000 people could flee Sudan as a result of the clashes there between rival military factions, the UN refugee agency said on Monday. ![]()
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