i m maryam moshiri. in sudan, the crisis continues as the army and the rival paramilitary groups are accusing each other of breaking the extended ceasefire. this is thousands of people sudanese and many other nationalities including britons continuing to attempt to flee the country. there has been fighting in the capital khartoum as well as in the darfur region. the world health organization has warned that the war is having a catastrophic impact, with medical staff and patients unable to reach facilities and as people continue to flee, somehow found the journey more difficult than others. in a moment we will have the story of an nhs dr from manchester who is stuck in sudan and unable to get back for his hospital shifts next week. first, our diplomatic correspondent paul adams has the latest. yeah, the existing ceasefire was extremely patchy and there is no reason to believe this one won t be too. as far as the international community is concerned, those countries like britai
as far as the international community is concerned, those countries like britain and the united states who are urging their citizens, their civilians, to leave, it does present an extension of that window of opportunity for those evacuations to continue from the airstrip north of khartoum and also from port sudan on the red sea coast. so clearly there s a hope this will facilitate those continued evacuations. both the united states and britain have urged their civilians, their citizens, to leave as quickly as possible, to use this opportunity. but even that is a precarious affair. there was a reportjust this morning of a turkish c130 transport plane that was shot at and suffered some damage as it was taking off from that wadi saeedna base north of khartoum. so just an indication that despite the relative security surrounding that base this is not