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Fleeing Sudan: Evacuation challenge tests nations’ values

As hundreds of Chinese evacuees boarded the Chinese destroyer Nanning at Port Sudan this week, some cried with relief upon their escape from the warring factions that have plunged Sudan into chaos. “I was very worried that we wouldn’t be able to get out,” said one woman. “I am so proud to be Chinese.”

China’s rapid evacuation of 1,300 of Chinese citizens makes good on the country’s promise to protect the growing number of Chinese residing overseas. Other governments’ decisions on whether to undertake risky and dangerous evacuation operations have varied widely, due to geography, economic interests, and historic relations.

Why We Wrote This

How a country takes care of its citizens living abroad in a crisis can reveal much about its priorities and values. The chaos in Sudan is shining such a spotlight on nations from China to Germany to the United States.

If China is flexing a new military muscle to safeguard its citizens in Sudan, Saudi Arabia has touted itself as the humanitarian corridor out of Sudan for dozens of its citizens and thousands of foreign nationals.

Many Arab countries, as well as China, have pledged to keep their diplomatic staffs in Sudan until the last of their nationals leave the country, while the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom faced early criticism for evacuating embassies as citizens on the ground were told to “shelter in place.”

Distinguishing between its diplomatic corps and private citizens has been unthinkable in Germany, which has used its military in a display of solidarity and cross-border cooperation in helping airlift citizens of more than 30 other countries out of Sudan.

As hundreds of Chinese evacuees boarded the Chinese destroyer Nanning at Port Sudan this week, many waved red five-star flags, and some cried with relief upon their escape from the warring factions that have plunged Sudan into chaos.

“Compatriots, no matter where you are, the great motherland will always be your strongest backup!” a naval officer told the 678 passengers, including 10 foreigners. “Please rest assured – we’ve arrived, everyone is safe!” he said through a loudspeaker, inciting cheers from the crowd.

“I was very worried that we wouldn’t be able to get out,” said one Chinese woman, choking back tears, in a state-television interview. “I am so proud to be Chinese.”

Why We Wrote This

How a country takes care of its citizens living abroad in a crisis can reveal much about its priorities and values. The chaos in Sudan is shining such a spotlight on nations from China to Germany to the United States.

China’s rapid evacuation of 1,300 Chinese – the majority of China’s citizens in Sudan – makes good on the country’s promise to protect the growing number of Chinese residing overseas. Other governments’ decisions on whether to undertake risky and dangerous evacuation operations – and how and when they’ve chosen to do so – have varied widely, due to geography, economic interests, and historic relations.

Amid the civil strife in Sudan, countries have opted for a range of strategies, from China’s flexing of new military muscle to evacuate Chinese people, to Gulf nations routing their citizens out even as their diplomats stay put in Sudan. Some have invited early criticism for evacuating embassies while telling their citizens on the ground to “shelter in place,” while others have made no distinction between diplomatic corps and private citizens and have airlifted all their people out – and additional foreign nationals to boot.

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