TASIS meets NGOs in Nyala, signals legal system overhaul

Ezzeldin Mohamed Ahmed al-Safi, head of the National Authority for Humanitarian Access, held talks with international organisations in Nyala, pledging to restructure legal institutions in areas under the control of the Sudan Founding Alliance (TASIS), according to a statement published on the alliance’s official Telegram channel.

The meeting focused on engagement with humanitarian actors operating in TASIS-held territory, with al-Safi outlining plans to overhaul legal and administrative structures to ensure stability and facilitate aid operations.

The statement did not identify the organisations involved or provide details on the scope or timeline of the proposed reforms.

TASIS is a political and military alliance that includes the Rapid Support Forces and allied factions, and has sought to establish civilian governing institutions in areas under its control amid Sudan’s ongoing conflict.

The move signals an expansion of TASIS efforts beyond humanitarian coordination, as the alliance increasingly pushes to formalise authority through legal and administrative frameworks in territory outside the control of General al-Burhan’s SAF.

Nyala, the capital of South Darfur, has emerged as a central hub for these efforts, hosting a growing number of political and administrative activities linked to the alliance’s self-declared governing structures.

The meeting follows recent directives by TASIS authorities requiring humanitarian organisations to coordinate directly with officials in Nyala, part of a broader push to centralise oversight of aid operations and consolidate control on the ground.

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