UAE sending yet more aid to Sudan
The United Arab Emirates keeps sending aid to Sudan to help it get over the consequences of the floods that hit 17 out of its 18 states.
A plane carrying UAE supplies has just landed at
Khartoum International Airport. T
his is the third plane to arrive in the country,
bringing in humanitarian aid from the UAE since the flooding started in Sudan.
The UAE humanitarian airlift is made under
instructions by Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohamed bin Zayed. The aid is also being
sent under supervision by Sheikh Hamdan bin Zayed al-Nahayan, the head of the
Emirati Red Crescent.
Receiving the third plane of UAE humanitarian
supplies at Khartoum International Airport was UAE Ambassador in Sudan Hamad
Mohamed Hmeid al-Junaibi and Dr Wed Bakr al-Maqboul, the director-general of
the Emergency Section at the Sudanese Ministry of Health.
This shipment of UAE aid contains medical
supplies, foodstuffs and other requirements.
Al-Junaibi said the supplies sent by the UAE would
sustain thousands of flood victims.
"We have given aid to more than 10,000
people," he said.
He said the UAE reached those affected by the
floods though the Emirati Red Crescent and in cooperation with government
agencies and civil society organizations.
Al-Maqboul praised, meanwhile, what he described
as the "huge" support offered by the UAE to his country.
The shipment of supplies that arrived in Sudan
today, he added, is part of a series of aid from the UAE to Sudan.
"We are really thankful to the UAE for
standing by Sudan and by those affected by the floods," al-Maqboul said.
"We will do our best to deliver this aid to
those who deserve it," he added.



