The federal government on Friday said the Nigeria Airforce (NAF C-130H) plane and Air Peace plane have been cleared to fly Egyptian airspace for the evacuation of Nigerians stranded in Sudan.
This followed the outbreak of war between the Sudanese armed forces and paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.
The government confirmed this in a joint press statement issued to journalists by the Permanent Secretaries of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Janet Olisa, and that of Humanitarian Affairs, Dr Sani Gwarzo, in Abuja.
โThe NAF C-130H is scheduled to leave Abuja on April 28, 2023, to commence the airlift of the stranded students.
โSimilarly, arrangements have been concluded to airlift all Nigerians that have already escaped on their own to safety in countries neighbouring Sudan.
โHowever, forty buses have been secured in Sudan to convey the students and other Nigerians from Khartoum to Aswan border in Egypt.
โWhich is one of the identified safe reception borders, as at time of this statement, the first batch of buses had already departed Khartoum,โ the statement said.
The federal government however said the initial hitches during transportation of stranded Nigerian students from Khartoum where bus drivers stopped and dropped the students in the desert over non-payment transport fees have been resolved.
โSome Nigerian students who found their way to the Ethiopian border were allowed entry into Ethiopia, following the interventions of some Nigerian leaders.
โThe students are in safe condition. Similarly, another group of Nigerians assisted by the government of the United Arab Emirate have arrived in Jeddah in Saudi Arabia and arrangements are being made to return them back home,โ it assured.
The government said it has already convened a Situation Room to monitor the evacuation exercise.
It stated that the situation room is chaired by the Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs.
(NAN)