Chad relocates Sudan refugees as army deploys near border

By Mahamat Ramadane Reuters Chad has begun the emergency relocation of refugees from its border with Sudan as the ‌army prepares to deploy to the area in response to ‌cross-border attacks, an official from the country’s refugee agency told Reuters on Monday. President Mahamat Idriss ​Deby last week ordered the army to prepare to retaliate after a cross-border drone attack from Sudan killed 17 people in Chad including mourners attending a funeral service. A separate government statement last week said Chad had strengthened its ‌security presence at the ⁠border and could potentially carry out operations on Sudanese territory. Initial refugee relocation operations will involve around 2,300 people, more ⁠than half of them women and children, said Saleh Tebir Souleymane, the representative in the border town of Tine for Chad’s National Commission for the ​Reception and ​Reintegration of Refugees and Returnees. They began ​moving people further into Chad, ‌away from the frontier, on Sat...

Cubans queue for water in Havana amid fuel and power crisis

Residents across the Cuban capital hauled buckets and lined up for water from tanker trucks as a combination of fuel shortages and power grid instability ​left thousands ‌of taps dry.

State water utility ​Aguas de La Habana confirmed that pumping schedules and supply operations have been ‌disrupted by a lack of ⁠electricity. 

“This area is now having ​water problems. People are hauling water and waiting for the water truck,” said resident Lazaro Noblet, while pushing a small handcart loaded with containers.

“Since oil is not ‌coming into the country, there is no pumping, because that system runs on electricity.”

The energy crunch ‌follows a spike in U.S. pressure on ‌Havana since the January capture of ‌Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, Cuba’s primary benefactor. 

U.S. President Donald Trump has ‌since ‌cut Venezuelan oil shipments to Cuba and threatened tariffs on other suppliers, strangling the ⁠island’s fragile power infrastructure.

For many, however, ‌the struggle is not new. “Our problem has existed since ‌2021, and now it is ⁠2026,” said 58-year-old Maria ‌de Jesus Rusindo, who has spent years carrying heavy containers into her home.

In other districts, Alfonso Pedro Gonzalez checked an empty roof tank ‌before turning a dry faucet. He must boil the small amount of water he ‌manages to collect from trucks.

SOURCE: REUTERS AND AGENCIES



from The Times Of Earth https://ift.tt/AURgPdF

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