And on Tuesday, two Turkish engineers working for a Turkish company in Sudan were kidnapped while they were returning to their home with a Sudanese driver, in Kabkabiya, North Darfur, before the Rapid Support Forces announced their liberation, Thursday.
The head of the Intelligence Department of the Rapid Support Forces, Major General Al-Khair Abdullah Abu Mreidat, said that “Sudanese-Turkish relations are well-established throughout history,” praising Ankara’s support for Khartoum in all fields.
During the press conference held at Khartoum Airport on Friday evening, in the presence of the Turkish ambassador, Irfan Nazir Oglu, and the editors, Abu Mreidat expressed his regret to the Turkish government, praising the efforts of the security services to liberate them “through a tight and precise security operation.”
Abu Mreidat said that the security forces arrested a group of perpetrators, who are under investigation and investigation.
The Turkish ambassador said that the engineers were working at the power plant in El Fasher, stressing that the embassy was in contact with Sudanese officials throughout the kidnapping period.
Nazir Oglu praised the interest and efforts of the Sudanese government, the government of the Darfur region and the various security services to liberate the engineers and arrest some of the culprits, stressing “the strength and strength of the relationship and friendship between the peoples of the two countries.”
The ambassador stressed that “the incident is isolated and will not affect the level of the strategic relationship between Sudan and Turkey, and that relations with Sudan are long and strong. We have a common history and customs.”
The governor of North Darfur, Nimr Abdel Rahman, described the kidnapping as “an isolated incident that will not affect the level of the strategic relationship between Sudan and Turkey.”
Abdul Rahman praised the efforts of the Rapid Support Forces to liberate the Turks in a qualitative operation and return them safely, and he praised all the regular forces and the state security committee.
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