fighting in the streets, some people have had to make their way through that in order to get to these airports, especially in the earlier days, so it is a difficult and dangerous journey and once you get to the airport, then you have to work out what flights you can get on because for some of them, they won t know what time the flight is supposed to leave or how many flights there will be. of course, we now know from the foreign office that a total of eight flights will have left sudan by the end of today. they will be carrying british nationals, but not everybody in sudan is able to access that information very easily, so that just gives you a sense of how difficult it will have been for most of the people who will be arriving here today and what a great sense of relief it will be for them to be here, but for many, probably still a lingering sense of anxiety, wondering what will happen to those who have stayed home, those who haven t been able to leave and of course what wil
after this as well, once this ceasefire ends in the future is very uncertain and very unclear. this as they travelled from their homes to that airfield outside khartoum, they would have gone past businesses, homes, hospitals, public facilities, damaaed homes, hospitals, public facilities, damaged and homes, hospitals, public facilities, damaged and destroyed homes, hospitals, public facilities, damaged and destroyed from - homes, hospitals, public facilities, damaged and destroyed from the l damaged and destroyed from the fighting that we have seen in khartoum and you mentioned that ceasefire. is it holding, do we know? or is there still some sporadic fighting taking place? well, reports say that the ceasefire is holding, primarily. there were reports earlier this where it was, the rsf was claiming that that ceasefire had been broken, but those reports have not been confirmed. what we re hearing for now is that the ceasefire is holding and that in itself, is something because there