trip and not secure, to say the least. they could possibly try to drive to the nearest country, which is eritrea, but the leader of eritrea is not friendly to the us not friendly to the west in general, actually. so, in the meantime, the americans have been gathering their personnel from their homes and bringing them to a secure centralised spot so that they could be prepared to evacuate, should it become possible. they ve also been pushing for a three day ceasefire, along with the un and others. this would be a ceasefire for the muslim holiday of eid al fitr, which begins on friday, and that would allow notjust foreigners but also sudanese to be able to leave conflict zones where they are trapped. so, what do we know about the two military men at the centre of this crisis? here s our diplomatic correspondent paul adams. general al burhan and mohammed
marking the eid al fitr celebrations to allow civilians trapped in conflict zones to escape and seek medical treatment, food, and other essential supplies. dalia abdelmoniem is a resident of khartoum and ventured outside for the first time in almost a week ahead of the upcoming eid holiday. no one is celebrating. what these men have done to us, i don t think, there are no words to describe if, you know, the ramifications of what they have done. i don t know how we as a people or as a country can recover. live now to kalkidan yibeltal, who is monitoring the situation from the ethiopian capital, addis ababa. thank you very much forjoining us. we have seen diplomatic to pressure increasing calls from ethiopian, south sudan, and other leaders calling for and other leaders calling for an entity fighting. why isn t it having an impact?- an entity fighting. why isn t it having an impact? yes, as ou it having an impact? yes, as you said. it having an impact? yes, as you said. in it havi
dismissed the possibility of negotiations with the paramilitary rsf. the violence is now thought to have killed at least 330 people with thousands more injured. many khartoum residents have been trapped inside their homes. dalia abdelmoniem ventured outside for the first time in almost a week ahead of the upcoming eid holiday. no one is celebrating. what these men have done to us, i don t think there s no words to describe if you know, the ramifications of what they ve done. i don t know how we as a people or as a country can recover. in light of the worsening situation, us officials say they are readying for a possible evacuation of staff from the american embassy in khartoum, moving more us troops to a base in nearby djibouti. bbc s barbara plett usher has more from washington. the pentagon says that it s deploying these extra troops and equipment in the region near sudan it doesn t say where.
grade will stay. some agree schools have to be held to account like this for children s education. parents trust us with the safety, well being and education of their children. and it must be right that we build public confidence by being open and transparent in everything that we do. schools are still recovering from the pandemic one reason perhaps for the response to these events. the government backs inspections continuing. head teachers unions say ofsted has misjudged the strength of feeling. an inquest will look at ruth perry s death later this year. branwen jeffreys, bbc news. and the head of ofsted, amanda spielman, will be one of laura kuenssberg s guests this sunday morning at nine o clock on bbc two. in sudan, despite calls for a ceasefire for the eid holiday marking the end of ramadan, there s been an escalation