
The head of a humanitarian body linked to the TASIS alliance held talks with a Sudanese relief agency in South Darfur, according to Arabic-language reports circulated by affiliated channels.
Reports said the chief of the National Humanitarian Access Authority, Ezzedine al-Safi, met with Sudanese Relief Agency executive director Abdulrahman Ahmed Ismail, alongside managers and staff from the agency’s central office and state branches.
The discussions reportedly focused on strengthening coordination and facilitating the delivery of humanitarian aid in South Darfur, one of the regions hardest hit by Sudan’s ongoing war. However, no detailed public readout of decisions or specific commitments from the meeting was immediately available.
The National Humanitarian Access Authority is part of the civilian administrative structures established by the TASIS alliance, which includes the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and allied political and armed groups. The body is tasked with overseeing humanitarian access, including movement permits, coordination with aid actors, and administrative procedures in areas under alliance influence.
The Sudanese Relief Agency operates in areas under TASIS influence and is involved in facilitating humanitarian activities on the ground, according to available reporting.
The meeting appears to form part of broader efforts by TASIS-linked institutions to build out humanitarian coordination mechanisms, as the conflict continues to fragment governance and complicate aid delivery across Sudan.
The authority and the agency have previously been presented in affiliated reporting as working together on relief operations targeting displaced people and communities affected by the war.
No independent confirmation of the meeting was immediately available from major international organisations or wire services.
Humanitarian agencies have repeatedly warned that restricted access and competing administrative systems imposed by rival authorities are hampering the delivery of aid across Darfur, where conditions continue to deteriorate.




