Sudan’s warring sides target local aid volunteers fighting famine

Sudan’s warring sides target local aid volunteers fighting famine
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A Sudanese woman from a community kitchen, run by local volunteers, prepares a meal for people who are affected by conflict and extreme hunger and are out of reach of international aid efforts, in Omdurman. (Reuters)
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Updated 08 October 2024
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Sudan’s warring sides target local aid volunteers fighting famine

Sudan’s warring sides target local aid volunteers fighting famine
  • Arrests and looting hinder Sudan’s community kitchens
  • Some have stopped serving meals for weeks in areas at risk of famine
  • Donors have ramped up support, but volunteers say this is making them a target for troops

KHARTOUM: Local volunteers who have helped to feed Sudan’s most destitute during 17 months of war say attacks against them by the opposing sides are making it difficult to provide life-saving aid amid the world’s biggest hunger crisis.

Many volunteers have fled under threat of arrest or violence, and communal kitchens they set up in a country where hundreds are estimated to be dying of starvation and hunger-related diseases each day have stopped serving meals for weeks at a time.

Reuters spoke with 24 volunteers who manage kitchens in Sudan’s central state of Khartoum, the western region of Darfur and parts of the east where millions of people have been driven from their homes since fighting erupted between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

International humanitarian agencies, which have been unable to get food aid to parts of Sudan at risk of famine, have ramped up support for such groups. But that has made them more of a target for RSF looters, 10 of the volunteers told Reuters by phone.

“We were safe when the RSF didn’t know about the funding,” said Gihad Salaheldin, a volunteer who left Khartoum city last year and spoke from Cairo. “They see our kitchens as a source of food.”

Both sides have also attacked or detained volunteers on suspicion of collaborating with their opponents, a dozen volunteers said.

Most of the volunteers spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation.

One volunteer in Bahri, a city that together with Khartoum and Omdurman makes up Sudan’s greater capital, said troops in RSF uniforms stole the phone he used to receive donations via a mobile banking app along with 3 million Sudanese pounds ($1,200) in cash intended for food in June.

It was one of five incidents this year in which he says he was attacked or harassed by paramilitary troops who control neighborhoods where he oversees 21 kitchens serving around 10,000 people.

Later that month, troops burst into a home housing one of the kitchens in the middle of the night and stole sacks of sorghum and beans. The volunteer, who had been sleeping there, said he was bound, gagged and whipped for hours by troops who wanted to know who was funding the group.

Reuters could not independently verify his account, but three other volunteers said that he reported the events to the rest of the group at the time.

The frequency of such incidents increased as international funding for communal kitchens picked up heading into the summer, according to eight volunteers from Khartoum state, which is mostly controlled by the RSF.

Many kitchens do not keep data on attacks, while others declined to provide details for fear of drawing more unwanted attention. However, volunteers described to Reuters 25 incidents targeting their kitchens or volunteers in the state since July alone, including more thefts and beatings and the detention of at least 52 people.

Groups that run kitchens there have announced the deaths of at least three volunteers in armed attacks, including one they said was shot and killed by RSF troops in Khartoum’s SHajjarah neighborhood in September. The identities of the other assailants were not immediately clear, and Reuters could not verify the accounts.

“Community kitchens in Sudan are a lifeline for people who are trapped in areas with ongoing conflict,” said Eddie Rowe, the UN World Food Programme’s country director in Sudan.

“By supporting them, WFP is able to get food into the hands of hundreds of thousands of people at risk of famine, even in the face of severe access constraints,” he told Reuters, saying the safety of aid workers must be guaranteed.

The RSF and Sudanese Armed Forces did not respond to questions for this article. However, the RSF has previously denied targeting aid workers and said any rogue elements who did so would be brought to justice.

The military has also said it does not target aid workers, but anyone who collaborates with the “rebellious” RSF is subject to arrest.

Marauding troops

UN officials say more than half of Sudan’s population – 25.6 million people – are experiencing acute hunger and need urgent assistance. In the worst-hit areas, residents displaced by fighting or under siege in their homes have resorted to eating dirt and leaves.

Local volunteers founded hundreds of kitchens early in the war that served hot meals — typically a meagre porridge of sorghum, lentils or beans — once or twice a day. But as food prices soared and private donations dwindled, some had to close or reduce services to as little as five times a month.

In North Darfur state, a group that runs kitchens in a camp housing half a million people displaced by ethnically driven violence has repeatedly had to stop serving meals due to insufficient funds, a volunteer there said. A global authority on hunger crises said in August that the conflict and restrictions on aid deliveries have caused famine in the Zamzam camp.

Many communal kitchens are operated by a loose network of community groups known as emergency response rooms, which have tried to sustain basic services, such as water and power, and distribute food and medical supplies.

Both the army and RSF distrust these groups, in part because they include people who were members of grassroots “resistance committees” that led pro-democracy protests during the uprising that toppled former autocrat Omar Al-Bashir in 2019. The volunteers who spoke to Reuters said the objectives of the emergency response rooms are purely humanitarian.

The army joined forces with the RSF to derail the political transition that followed Bashir’s ouster by staging a military coup two years later, but rivalries between them erupted into open warfare in April 2023.

In the worst-hit areas, local volunteers said they were now being targeted weekly or every few days by marauding troops, compared to roughly once a month earlier in the year. Some have started hiding food supplies at different locations to avoid being cleaned out by a single raid.

Reuters spoke to nine volunteers who fled various parts of the country after being targeted by the warring sides.

“These attacks are having a huge negative impact on our work,” Salaheldin said from Cairo. “We are losing our volunteers who are serving their communities.”

In areas where the army retains control, six volunteers described arrests and surveillance that they said drove away people who had helped run kitchens, reducing their capacity to operate.

A UN fact-finding mission discovered that, of 65 cases tried by army-convened courts against alleged “commanders and employees” of the RSF as of June, 63 targeted activists and humanitarian workers. They included members of emergency response rooms, the mission said in its report.

Both sides have deployed siege-like tactics to prevent food and other supplies reaching their opponents, according to relief workers. The RSF and allied militias have also looted aid hubs and plundered harvests, they say.

The warring parties have traded blame for delays in the delivery of food relief, while the RSF has denied looting aid.

Military chief General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and RSF leader Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo both said in September that they were committed to facilitating the flow of aid.

Donor reticence

As hunger spreads, emergency response rooms have set up 419 kitchens that aim to serve over 1 million people daily in Khartoum state alone, said Abdallah Gamar, a state organizer. But volunteers have struggled to secure the $1,175,000 needed every month. In September, they received around $614,000, Gamar told Reuters.

In the beginning, most of their support came from the Sudanese diaspora, but the resources of these donors have been depleted, Gamar said.

Aid workers said many foreign donors hesitated to fund kitchens because the groups running them are not registered with the government and often use personal bank accounts.

“There’s a lot of risk aversion when it comes to supporting unregistered platforms,” said Mathilde Vu, the Norwegian Refugee Council’s advocacy manager for Sudan.

Her organization began supporting local responders in Sudan last year, she said. “Now we have seen that a lot of NGOs, UN agencies and donors are starting to realize that we cannot do any humanitarian response — we can’t save lives — without them.”

Some donors are now working through registered intermediaries to get funding to communal kitchens. The WFP, for example, began partnering with local aid groups in July to help some 200 kitchens provide hot meals to up to 175,000 people daily in greater Khartoum, spending more than $2 million to date, said spokesperson Leni Kinzli.

Volunteers welcomed the support but said it can take weeks for money to filter down to kitchens through intermediaries. Cumbersome reporting requirements add to the delays, they said.

“The kitchens work in a sporadic way — there’s no consistent funding,” said Mohamed Abdallah, spokesperson for an emergency response room south of Khartoum. He said his group sometimes has only enough money to provide meals once a week, including in neighborhoods at risk of famine.

Justin Brady, who heads the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Sudan, said donors need safeguards to ensure funds are used for their intended purpose but have taken steps to simplify the process.

Meanwhile, needs continue to grow.

The arrival of the rainy season over the summer brought flash floods and a heightened risk of deadly diseases such as cholera and malaria, stretching resources even thinner, volunteers said.

Sudan’s currency has fallen around 300 percent against the dollar on the parallel market during the war, and food prices have risen by almost as much, according to WFP surveys.

“In neighborhoods where we had one kitchen, we now need three more,” said Hind Altayif, spokesperson for volunteers in Sharq Al-Nil, a district adjacent to Bahri where she said several people were dying of hunger each month. “As the war goes on, we’ll see more people reaching rock bottom.”

In one Bahri neighborhood, people line up twice a day with bowls and buckets to collect ladles of gruel prepared over a fire in the courtyard of a volunteer’s home. Standing among them are teachers, traders and others cut off from livelihoods.

“We don’t have any food at home because we don’t have the money,” said a 50-year-old housewife, who like others interviewed requested anonymity for safety. “We rely on the community kitchen ... We don’t have an alternative.”


Japan won’t recognize a Palestinian state given US ties, media report says

Japan won’t recognize a Palestinian state given US ties, media report says
Updated 9 sec ago
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Japan won’t recognize a Palestinian state given US ties, media report says

Japan won’t recognize a Palestinian state given US ties, media report says
  • Several governments, including those in Britain, France, Canada and Australia, have said they will recognize a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly this month
  • The US had prompted Japan to forgo the recognition of a Palestinian state through several diplomatic channels

TOKYO: Japan will not recognize a Palestinian state for now, a decision likely taken to maintain relations with the United States and to avoid a hardening of Israel’s attitude, the Asahi newspaper reported on Wednesday, citing unidentified government sources.

Several governments, including those in Britain, France, Canada and Australia, have said they will recognize a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly this month, adding international pressure on Israel over its actions in the territory.

The US had prompted Japan to forgo the recognition of a Palestinian state through several diplomatic channels, while French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot had strongly urged his Japanese counterpart to recognize it, Kyodo news agency reported last week.

Japan has been conducting a “comprehensive assessment, including appropriate timing and modalities, of the issue of recognizing Palestinian statehood,” Foreign Minister Takeshi Iwaya told a news briefing on Tuesday.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi, the government’s top spokesperson, repeated the statement at a news conference on Wednesday when asked about the Asahi report. But Hayashi expressed a “grave sense of crisis” over the Israeli ground assault on Gaza City, saying “the very foundations of a two-state solution could be collapsing.”

He urged Israel to “take substantive steps to end the severe humanitarian crisis, including famine, as soon as possible.” At a UN meeting on Friday, Japan was among 142 nations that voted in favor of a declaration outlining “tangible, timebound, and irreversible steps” toward a two-state solution between Israel and the Palestinians.

But Asahi said Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba is set to skip a September 22 meeting on the subject during the UN gathering in New York. Within the Group of Seven nations, German and Italian officials have called an immediate recognition of Palestine “counterproductive.”


UN relocates Yemen’s resident coordinator’s office to Aden

UN relocates Yemen’s resident coordinator’s office to Aden
Updated 17 September 2025
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UN relocates Yemen’s resident coordinator’s office to Aden

UN relocates Yemen’s resident coordinator’s office to Aden
  • “The Ministry reiterates its strongest condemnation of the continued arbitrary detention of dozens of humanitarian workers by the Houthi militia and calls for their immediate and unconditional release,” it added

ADEN: The United Nations has relocated the place of appointment of the resident coordinator for Yemen to Aden, more than a week after at least 18 UN personnel were detained in the capital Sanaa.

The resident coordinator’s office for Yemen said on Tuesday that the office location was changed to Aden, but that the resident coordinator would continue to fulfill his mandate across the country.

“The Resident Coordinator maintains a presence in Sanaa and he will be traveling across the country, including to Sanaa,” the office said.

The foreign ministry of the Aden-based government earlier on Tuesday welcomed the UN’s decision, calling on the body’s other programs to follow suit.

“The Ministry reiterates its strongest condemnation of the continued arbitrary detention of dozens of humanitarian workers by the Houthi militia and calls for their immediate and unconditional release,” it added. The UN previously said that Houthi rebels raided its premises in Sanaa on August 31 and detained UN staff, following an Israeli strike that killed the prime minister of the Houthi-run government and several other ministers. Yemen’s Houthi-run Foreign Ministry said UN officials’ legal immunities should not shield espionage activities.

Before the recent detentions, the Houthis were already holding 23 UN personnel, some since 2021. Another UN staff member died while in Houthi custody in February.

Yemen has been split between a Houthi administration in Sanaa and a Saudi-backed government in Aden since the Iran-aligned Houthis seized Sanaa in late 2014, triggering a decade-long conflict.

The UN’s World Food Programme said in a statement on Tuesday that the recent escalations by the Houthis were “intolerable,” adding: “The arbitrary detention of WFP and United Nations staff members, forced entry into UN offices, destruction and seizure of property, and coerced actions against national staff are unacceptable and have severely compromised the ability of WFP and other UN and humanitarian organizations to reach vulnerable communities in northern Yemen.” It called for the release of all aid workers.

 


Hostages, humanitarian crisis: the Gaza war in five key points

Hostages, humanitarian crisis: the Gaza war in five key points
Updated 17 September 2025
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Hostages, humanitarian crisis: the Gaza war in five key points

Hostages, humanitarian crisis: the Gaza war in five key points
  • Most of the Palestinian territory’s more than two million inhabitants have been displaced, many of them more than once
  • Hamas and its ally Islamic Jihad in August broadcast videos showing two hostages in a weakened state, one apparently digging his own grave

JERUSALEM: Following the launch of a major Israeli ground offensive in Gaza City on Tuesday, here is a snapshot of the Gaza war, sparked by Palestinian militant group Hamas’s unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.

Israel’s retaliatory campaign has killed nearly 65,000 Palestinians, mainly civilians, according to health ministry figures from the Hamas-run territory that the United Nations considers reliable.

- Hamas attacks -

At dawn on Saturday, October 7, 2023, during the Jewish festival of Simhat Torah, hundreds of Hamas fighters infiltrate Israel from the Gaza Strip under a hail of rockets.

At least 1,219 people, mainly civilians, are killed on the Israeli side in attacks on kibbutzim and a rave music festival, according to an AFP count based on official Israeli figures.

The attackers take 251 hostages back to Gaza, some of them already dead.

Israel’s domestic intelligence agency the Shin Bet, as well as the army, later acknowledged their failure in preventing the attack. The Shin Bet said there had been an overarching assessment that Hamas was more focused on “inciting violence” in the occupied West Bank.

It said that “a policy of quiet had enabled Hamas to undergo massive military buildup.”

- Hostages -

One hundred and forty-one of the hostages taken during the attack — including eight who were dead — were released in November 2023 and in early 2025, during the war’s two ceasefires. In return Israel freed more than 2,000 Palestinian prisoners.

Some hostages have been brought back, both alive and dead, by the Israeli army over the course of the war. As of September 16, 2025, 47 hostages remained in Gaza, of whom at least 25 are believed to be dead.

Hamas and its ally Islamic Jihad in August broadcast videos showing two hostages in a weakened state, one apparently digging his own grave.

The plight of the hostages, who were mainly civilians of all ages, came to be symbolized by the Bibas family.

Only the father was released alive — his wife and their two small sons, abducted at the ages of eight-and-a-half months and four years old, were killed in captivity in Gaza.

- Humanitarian crisis -

The air and ground campaign launched by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, vowing to destroy Hamas and bring home all the hostages, has left tens of thousands of Gazan civilians dead, sometimes whole families.

The United Nations said the war had brought a level of destruction unprecedented in recent history, with at least 78 percent of buildings damaged or destroyed, including hospitals and schools.

Most of the Palestinian territory’s more than two million inhabitants have been displaced, many of them more than once.

Humanitarian aid trickles in, though the Israeli authorities completely blocked the arrival of supplies for 11 weeks starting in March 2025, only easing the blockade in late May.

After months of warnings, a UN-backed report in August declared a state of famine in part of the territory, a finding disputed by Israel, which accuses Hamas of looting aid.

On Tuesday, United Nations investigators accused Israel of committing “genocide” in Gaza. Israel has slammed that UN probe as “distorted and false.”

The International Criminal Court has issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and former defense minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity.

- Conflict spreads -

Hamas is backed by Iran, and has received the support of allied armed groups around the region.

From the outset, the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah began firing rockets across the border at Israel.

Israel responded with months of air strikes, with the exchange of fire ultimately culminating in two months of open war and a ground incursion into Lebanon that a fragile ceasefire sought to end in November of 2024.

In solidarity with the Palestinians, Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels have been targeting shipping off Yemen, and have carried out repeated missile and drone attacks on Israel, which has hit back with several air strikes.

Israel also fought a 12-day war against its arch-foe Iran in mid-June, attacking the country’s military and nuclear sites and killing top commanders and scientists, as well as civilians.

Tehran responded with ballistic missile attacks targeting Israeli cities, killing more than two dozen people.

Iran had directly attacked Israel twice in 2024, launching waves of drones and missiles at its territory in retaliation for a deadly attack on a Damascus consular building blamed on Israel, and the killing of Hamas and Hezbollah chiefs.

- Battle for territory -

In August, the Israeli government approved an operation aimed at seizing the territory’s central refugee camps and Gaza City in the north, the Strip’s largest urban center.

Israel has said Gaza City is home to Hamas’s last stronghold, and that the operation will allow it to establish security control of the whole territory and free the last remaining hostages.

The operation, for which Israel has called up 60,000 reservists, has drawn international and domestic criticism over fears it could worsen the already dire humanitarian situation and put the hostages’ lives at risk.

But a week after carrying out an unprecedented strike in Qatar targeting Hamas officials, the Israeli army before dawn on Tuesday launched a major ground offensive in Gaza City after Washington voiced its staunch support for wiping out Hamas.

 


Priceless archaeological artifacts in Gaza saved in frantic rescue

Flames erupt from a building following an Israeli military strike in Gaza City, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025. (AP)
Flames erupt from a building following an Israeli military strike in Gaza City, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025. (AP)
Updated 16 September 2025
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Priceless archaeological artifacts in Gaza saved in frantic rescue

Flames erupt from a building following an Israeli military strike in Gaza City, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025. (AP)
  • The warning was triggered by a notification system managed by the international NGOS to let the Israeli military know that a specific area is a sensitive site such as a school, hospital, or warehouses holding humanitarian aid

JERUSALEM: Nine hours of frantic negotiation with the Israeli military. A last-minute scramble to find trucks in a devastated Gaza Strip, where fuel is in short supply. Six hours of frantic packing, carefully stacking cardboard boxes on open flatbed trucks.

With an Israeli airstrike looming, aid workers carried out a last-minute rescue mission to salvage thousands of priceless artifacts from a Gaza warehouse before the building was flattened.

The warehouse contained artifacts from over 25 years of excavations, including items from a 4th-century Byzantine monastery designated as a World Heritage Site by the UN cultural organization UNESCO, and some of the oldest known evidence of Christianity in Gaza. 

BACKGROUND

UNESCO said Israel has damaged at least 110 cultural sites across the Gaza Strip, including 13 religious sites, 77 buildings of historical or artistic interest, one museum, and seven archaeological sites, since the beginning of the war.

The Israeli military said the building housed Hamas intelligence installations and planned to demolish it as part of their expanded military operation in Gaza City.

“It’s not just about Palestinian heritage or Christian heritage, it’s something important to the world heritage here, protected by UNESCO,” explained Kevin Charbel, the emergency field coordinator for Première Urgence Internationale, a humanitarian organization has worked in Gaza since 2009. PUI is a health organization that also works toward the protection of Gaza’s cultural heritage.

COGAT, Israel’s defense body in charge of humanitarian aid, notified PUI of the demolition plan last Wednesday morning. 

The warning was triggered by a notification system managed by the international NGOS to let the Israeli military know that a specific area is a sensitive site such as a school, hospital, or warehouses holding humanitarian aid.

Charbel, who is based in Gaza City on a temporary humanitarian rotation, spent nine hours furiously negotiating with the Israeli military for a delay to allow workers to move the artifacts to a safer location. 

But the challenge was larger than just holding off the military. As Israel expands its operation in Gaza City, other organizations were in disarray, and no one could locate trucks to transport the artifacts at such short notice.

“Five minutes before I had to accept this was going to be evaporated in front of us, another actor offered us transport,” said Charbel. PUI worked with the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem to move the artifacts to a safer location in Gaza City that is not being disclosed for security reasons.

The French Biblical and Archaeological School of Jerusalem, a venerated archaeological institution in the region which oversaw the Dead Sea Scrolls excavation in Israel, was responsible for the storage of about 80 square meters  of archaeological artifacts in the Al-Kawthar high-rise building in Gaza City. PUI was providing security for the site.

Dozens of ancient archaeological sites have been found in Gaza, including temples, monasteries, palaces, churches, mosques and mosaics. 

Many of them have been lost to urban sprawl and looting. UNESCO is struggling to preserve some of those that remain. 

Some of the sites date back 6,000 years, when Gaza was a central stop on trade routes between Egypt and the Levant, and the emergence of urban societies began to transform farming villages.

The artifacts rescued this week include ceramic jugs, mosaics, coins, painted plasterwork, human and animal remains, and items excavated from the Saint Hilarion Monastery, one of the oldest known examples of Christian monastic communities in the Middle East, according to UNESCO.

Starting just after sunrise on Thursday, workers rushed to pack five flatbed trucks with as many delicate artifacts as they possibly could in the space of six hours. Artifacts, which had been carefully stored and documented in the warehouse, were hurriedly packed in cardboard boxes, with nearly 2,000-year-old pottery resting on the sandy ground.

Charbel noted that transporting such old artifacts usually requires intense preparation and special provisions to protect delicate objects, something that wasn’t possible in this instance. The Israeli military does not allow the use of closed container trucks, exposing the artifacts to additional dangers. 

Several items were broken en route and others had to be left behind. Israel destroyed the building on Sunday, claiming Hamas had positioned observation posts and intelligence-gathering infrastructure within it.

As Israel’s ground operation expands, the artifacts are being held in a different location in Gaza City. However, they are outside, exposed to the elements, and remain in grave danger as strikes intensify.

During the archaeological rescue, Charbel said, he and other aid workers also wrestled with deeper questions. Did it make sense to direct so many resources, including desperately needed fuel and trucks, risking the lives of multiple people who worked under constant threat of bombardment, for inanimate historical objects, when the humanitarian situation is so dire? Charbel said he was worried about spending so much time arguing over the archaeological artifacts when they also needed to negotiate with COGAT about life-saving water, food, and medicine.

 


Jordan hosts conference on counter-drone technology

Jordan hosts conference on counter-drone technology
Updated 16 September 2025
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Jordan hosts conference on counter-drone technology

Jordan hosts conference on counter-drone technology
  • Organizer: ‘Timing reflects growing threats posed by unmanned systems regionally and globally’
  • Representatives from 41 countries in attendance

LONDON: Jordan is hosting a two-day conference that started on Tuesday to discuss the latest developments in drone detection and interception technologies, ethical considerations and future challenges, Petra news agency reported.

The Counter-Unmanned Aircraft Systems Middle East and Africa Conference in Amman gathers representatives from 41 countries, including those in Europe, North America and NATO.

The Jordan Design and Development Bureau organized the conference, whose agenda comprises more than 20 panel sessions featuring 25 speakers, including international experts, specialists and developers.

“The timing of the conference reflects the growing threats posed by unmanned systems regionally and globally,” said Ayman Batran, general director of the bureau.

The conference is supported by the Jordan Armed Forces and was inaugurated by Maj. Gen. Yousef Huneiti, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The event is being attended by senior army officers, security officials, government representatives, ambassadors and international experts, Petra reported.