A dad caught in the middle of a gunfight outside his home told his kids it was like a "game of hide and seek".
Munzir Salman was at his home in Khartoum, Sudan, with his three kids when Sudanese armed force soldiers were ambushed by Rapid Support Forces (RSF) officers outside his block of flats. The 37-year-old, who was born in Sudan, lived in Toxteth from the age of 10 before moving to Dubai and then returning home in 2013.
Fighting erupted in the country's capital Khartoum and across the country earlier this month as powerful rival military factions battle for control of the African nation and its future. The dad is now waiting to fly to the UK, via Larnaca, Cyprus, with his kids Siddig, 11, Shaden, eight, and Yasmin, six.
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The dad, who has dual citizenship, said: "What happened was some army soldiers were coming through and they were ambushed by the RSF.
“They then ran behind my house, and they were shooting at each other, I was in the middle.
“It was horrendous and, unfortunately, it’s not the first time I’ve had gunshots around me. I’m a single father of three kids so I had to stay calm for them.
“I had to tell them it was like a game and told them it was like a hide-and-seek game.
“It was an experience they had never been through before, it was very scary but I tried to make it a game for them.
“I explained the danger before trying to make it like Tom and Jerry where the people outside were Tom and we were Jerry.”
British nationals have faced dangerous journeys to the Wadi Saeedna airstrip in the hopes of being able to board an evacuation flight out of the country.
Eight flights were expected to have left by the end of Wednesday to lift people to safety as the military races against time to rescue citizens while a fragile ceasefire holds.
Foreign Secretary James Cleverly told UK nationals on Tuesday that they must make their own way to the airstrip.
Mr Salman, a builder, said: “It was hard to explain to them that it’s a dangerous journey.
“The first part was that the RSF were trying to spot us as we travelled through neighbourhoods. They spotted us four times but because they saw I had children they let us go.
“In a normal situation, the journey would have been 20 miles but because of what is going on we travelled 60 miles to get here.”
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