Multiple nations have scrambled to evacuate embassy staff and citizens by road, air and sea from Sudan, where fighting between the army and paramilitaries has killed hundreds and led to acute shortages of water, food, medicines and fuel.
Rescue operations intensified in recent days as a 72-hour ceasefire took effect on Tuesday.
But some fighting was reported around the country on Wednesday, with witnesses describing "heavy air strikes" east of the capital, Khartoum.
"Recently, the security situation in Sudan has continued to deteriorate," Chinese defence ministry spokesman Tan Kefei said.
The navy was deployed on Wednesday, he added, "in order to protect the lives and property of Chinese people in Sudan". He did not specify the number of vessels involved.
China said on Monday it had safely evacuated an initial group of citizens, estimating about 1,500 of its nationals were in Sudan.
And on Wednesday evening Wu Xi, head of consular affairs at the foreign ministry, told state broadcaster CCTV more than 1,100 Chinese nationals -- including Hong Kong residents -- had been evacuated.
China says it is Sudan's largest trading partner, with more than 130 companies investing there as of mid-2022.
Some 800 Chinese citizens would be evacuated from Sudan by sea from April 25 to 27, foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning said Wednesday.
More than 300 other people have crossed over to countries bordering Sudan by land, she added.
The fighting has killed at least 512 people and wounded more than 4,000, according to Sudan's health ministry, and reduced some districts of greater Khartoum to ruins.
UN agencies reported Sudanese civilians "fleeing areas affected by fighting, including to Chad, Egypt and South Sudan".
With Khartoum's international airport disabled after battles that damaged many aircraft, groups of foreigners have been airlifted out from smaller airstrips.
Other evacuations were taking place from Port Sudan, an 850-kilometre (530-mile) drive from Khartoum.
An Indonesian military plane flew 110 Indonesian nationals from Port Sudan to the Saudi city of Jeddah on Wednesday, the foreign ministry tweeted Thursday.
It brought the total number of Indonesians evacuated from Sudan since the outbreak of conflict to 667.
Ceasefire shaky as Sudanese, foreigners flee
Khartoum (AFP) April 26, 2023 -
A US-brokered ceasefire between Sudan's warring generals entered its second day Wednesday but remained fragile after witnesses reported fresh air strikes and paramilitaries claimed to have seized a major oil refinery and power plant.
"The pause was not fully upheld, with attacks on headquarters, attempts to gain ground, air strikes, and explosions in different areas of the capital," UN Special Representative Volker Perthes told the Security Council Tuesday.
Perthes said he maintained contact with both generals: army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his deputy-turned-rival, Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, who commands the heavily armed paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).
"There is yet no unequivocal sign that either is ready to seriously negotiate," Perthes said.
Security fears were compounded when the World Health Organization (WHO) warned Tuesday of a "huge biological risk" after fighters occupied a Khartoum laboratory holding samples of cholera, measles, polio and other infectious diseases.
The fighting has killed hundreds of people and left some neighbourhoods of greater Khartoum in ruins, prompting thousands of foreigners and Sudanese to flee.
- 'Children horrified' -
As combat eased in the city of five million, foreign governments have been organising road convoys, aircraft and ships to get thousands of their nationals out.
A boat carrying nearly 1,700 civilians from more than 50 countries arrived in Saudi Arabia early Wednesday, the kingdom's foreign ministry said.
It added that it has evacuated 2,148 people, including more than 2,000 foreigners.
Other evacuation efforts continued, with a British military transport plane landing in Cyprus.
"The most difficult thing was the sounds of the bombing and the jet fighters while flying above our home. That horrified the children," said Safa Abu Taher, who landed with her family at a military airport in Jordan Tuesday night.
Bewildered civilians were seen walking down one street in Khartoum North where almost all buildings were blasted out and smoke rose from scorched ruins, in unverified video posted on social media.
Witnesses in the same area later reported air strikes, and paramilitary forces firing anti-aircraft weapons.
Late Tuesday, witnesses reported more air strikes in Khartoum North where they said fighter jets struck RSF vehicles.
- Jailbreak reports -
The RSF posted a video in which it claimed to be in control of an oil refinery and the associated Garri power plant more than 70 kilometres (43 miles) north of Khartoum.
Shortly before, the army had warned in a Facebook post of "heavy movement towards the refinery in order to take advantage of the truce by taking control of the refinery".
The two sides have both made unverifiable claims to control key sites, adding to what experts call an overwhelming state of fear in the capital.
According to lawyers, at least one jailbreak took place earlier this week, with reports of another at Kober prison, where former dictator Omar al-Bashir -- who is wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide -- was being held.
Ahmed Harun, a former top aide who is also wanted by the ICC, said in a recorded address to Sudanese television on Tuesday that a number of officials from Bashir's regime were out of jail.
"We remained in our detention at Kober, under the crossfire of this current battle, for nine days," even after the jail was emptied of both guards and prisoners, and "have now taken responsibility for our protection in our own hands" in another location.
Bashir's whereabouts could not be independently verified.
In Wad Banda, West Kordofan state, witnesses reported clashes between the army and RSF, including the use of fighter jets.
In West Darfur, "near the Chadian border, fighting has resumed with increased and worrying reports of tribes arming themselves and joining the fight," Perthes said Tuesday, adding that "intercommunal clashes" have also broken out in Blue Nile, on the southeastern border with Ethiopia.
- Keeping famine at bay -
A UN report said "shortages of food, water, medicines and fuel are becoming extremely acute, especially in Khartoum and surrounding areas".
"In some places, humanitarian aid is all that is keeping famine at bay," UN chief Antonio Guterres said Tuesday.
Despite the rocketing prices of fuel and bus tickets required to escape, the UN "received reports of tens of thousands of people arriving in the Central African Republic, Chad, Egypt, Ethiopia, and South Sudan," Assistant Secretary General Joyce Msuya said Tuesday.
The UN warned it was bracing for an exodus of up to 270,000 refugees to Sudan's even poorer neighbours Chad and South Sudan.
Fighting has killed at least 459 people and wounded more than 4,000 across Africa's third-biggest country, according to UN agencies.
Sudan, one of the world's poorest nations, has a history of military coups.
The RSF emerged from the Janjaweed militia that then-president Bashir unleashed in the Darfur region two decades ago.
The military toppled Bashir in April 2019 following mass citizen protests that raised hopes for a transition to democracy.
The two generals seized power in the 2021 coup, but later fell out, most recently over the planned integration of the RSF into the regular army.
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