Showing posts with label soldiers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soldiers. Show all posts

Fallen soldier Rory Malone added to Riverhead's roll of honour

A serviceman from the local area who perished in Afghanistan has had his name included on their town's memorial list.

Rory Malone was just 26 when he was shot by insurgents in Baghak in 2012.

He had just carried his wounded commanding officer to safety when he was fatally shot in the chest .

The Minister for Veterans, Chris Penk, mentioned that many people turned out to pay their respects as he visited his hometown of Riverhead in Auckland.

Several locals who knew about the event joined forces with fellow veterans from around Auckland, including members of the Point Chevalier RSA, as well as those keen on ensuring his service is remembered — making for an incredibly poignant homage to the young man witnessed at today’s gathering.

Penk said it was important to hold such events, even when it's a few years since the tragedy happened.

Compared to the First World War, this period is more recent, naturally. The First World War, as we know, lent its name to Anzac Day due to the Gallipoli campaign. However, regrettably, our service personnel still find themselves in harm’s way and fulfilling their duties, with the heartbreaking reality being that they occasionally make the supreme sacrifice.

Therefore, with Anzac Day approaching shortly, I trust that when we recite these words, they hold significance for both today’s younger generations and those from times past.

Malone was a member of the New Zealand provincial reconstruction team, and in 2015, he was posthumously honored with the Gallantry Medal for his courageous act of selflessness.

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Sudan's Army Chief Pledges Continued Battle Against RSF After Regaining Control of Capital

Sudan's army chief Gen Abdel Fattah Al Burhan has said the military will fight on against the Rapid Support Forces until the paramilitary group is crushed or disarmed.

Gen Al Burhan has repeatedly vowed to continue the war until the RSF is defeated. But his latest pledge, made on the eve of the Eid Al Fitr, takes on added significance because it came days after his troops and allied volunteers recaptured the nation's capital, Khartoum, ending two years of RSF control.

“The joy of victory will not be complete until the last insurgent has been eradicated in the farthest corner of Sudan ,” Gen Al Burhan said in a televised address.

“There will be no going back on defeating and crushing the terrorist Dagalo militia,” he added, in a reference to RSF commander and his one-time ally, Gen Mohamed Dagalo.

The army chief, who serves as Sudan's de facto leader, also ruled out negotiations with the RSF, saying it could only be spared defeat on the battlefield if it laid down its arms and surrendered. He has also said he would pardon RSF fighters who laid down their arms.

General Dagalo admitted to losing control of the capital in an address to his troops shared on social media on Sunday. This statement was made two days following their declaration that they would not withdraw nor yield, with claims that their units were merely regrouping.

"I assure you that we have departed from Khartoum, yet our resolve will be even more steadfast upon our return," stated Gen Dagalo.

Regaining control of the Sudanese capital crowned a string of military victories achieved by the armed forces and their partners within the broader area encompassing Khartoum, Bahri, and Omdurman as well as central Sudan’s fertile Al Jazira region, known for being the nation's breadbasket.

However, the RSF continues to maintain nearly complete dominance over the extensive western area of Darfur and exerts influence over portions of Kordofan in southwestern Sudan. The sole significant city in Darfur that remains under army control is El Fasher, which has faced an encirclement by the RSF since May of the previous year.

The RSF's forerunner, the notorious Janjaweed militia, is accused of committing atrocities against civilians in Darfur in the 2000s.

The war in Sudan broke out on April 15, 2023, when months of tension between Gen Al Burhan and Gen Dagalo boiled over into open conflict. Tens of thousands of people have been killed in the fighting, at least 12 million have been displaced and infrastructure has been destroyed.

The war also created the world's worst humanitarian crisis, with about 25 million facing acute hunger. About eight million are on the brink of famine.

Gen Al Burhan and Gen Dagalo jointly staged a takeover in 2021 that toppled a civilian-led transitional government. The coup derailed Sudan's democratic transition after the removal in 2019 of long-time president Omar Al Bashir.

The two commanders have been accused by the International Criminal Court of war crimes and faced sanctions from the US in the final days of Joe Biden's administration.

The extent of destruction in Khartoum and its sister cities has been shown in videos posted online since the army recaptured the city. Footage shows damaged buildings and aircraft at Khartoum airport, as well as vandalised offices, shattered windows and debris strewn across floors.

The presidential palace has also sustained damage and was blackened by fires.

Gen Al Burhan flew to Saudi Arabia on Friday, his first foreign trip after the army retook the capital, and met Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Sudanese Finance Minister Jibril Ibrahim said the two countries agreed to set up a joint committee to determine what is needed to restore normal life in Sudan, including basic services such as electricity, potable water and health care.

But while Khartoum may soon be put on the long road to recovery, the same cannot be said about other parts of the country, including Darfur.

Hours after Gen Al Burhan visited the presidential palace on Wednesday and declared the capital “free” of the RSF, the paramilitary group announced a military alliance with a faction of the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North. The rebel group controls parts of South Kordofan and Blue Nile states in the south.

The group clashed with the army and the RSF in the early stages of the war. But it was among several political and rebel groups that signed a charter with the RSF last month, as a prelude to establishing a rival government.

Witnesses in the Blue Nile state capital of Damazin reported that its airport and the Roseires Dam came under drone attack by the RSF and their allies for the first time in the war, AFP reported on Thursday. The army later said it shot down the RSF drones.

On Saturday, the RSF claimed it had seized a military base, about 140km south-west of Damazin.