Those stranded in Sudan from Yemen, Syria and Nigeria have appealed for intervention to evacuate them from the capital Khartoum and Port Sudan, which are witnessing a large exodus of people fleeing the ongoing clashes in the country.

Stranded people have appealed on social media for their transfer to Saudi Arabia on the other side of the Red Sea.

Students and members of volunteer committees to organize the evacuation of stranded people documented the situation of scholarship students and Yemeni, Syrian and Nigerian communities in the city.

The footage showed dozens of people stranded in the open amid difficult humanitarian conditions, and some of them bedding on the ground in the streets of Port Sudan, amid severe shortages of food and necessary supplies.

One Yemeni student criticized the abandonment of them by their government in these difficult circumstances, and the failure to operate flights to evacuate them, like the rest of the countries of the year that continue to rescue their citizens.

Suhaib al-Samai, a member of the General Union of Yemeni Students in Sudan, documented on Facebook on Friday evening that dozens of people had gathered in the port of Port Sudan waiting for evacuation convoys.

In another video, al-Samai said that a committee of Yemeni students collected the passports of family members and organized them with official documents in order to provide them to Saudi authorities, in the hope that they would be evacuated by ship to Saudi Arabia.

In a related context, a Syrian citizen residing in Sudan, Radwan Khaled, broadcast on his Facebook account live scenes of the gathering of hundreds of people wishing to leave Port Sudan, describing the situation as "tragic."

Khaled appealed to the concerned authorities to expedite the convoys of those wishing to leave Sudan, before the situation worsens or the food available to the members of the community becomes scarce.

Like Yemen and Syria, the Nigerian community suffers from conditions that are no less dangerous and worse than other expatriates and residents in Sudan.

Nigerian activist Hamid al-Hassan posted a video on Facebook documenting the situation of Nigerians stranded at the International University of Africa in Khartoum, accusing his country's embassy of defrauding and manipulating them, saying, "The members of the community have taken refuge from the International University of Africa in Khartoum after they were stranded."

Al-Hassan addressed UN organizations to rescue children and women stranded at the university from the threat of ongoing clashes in Khartoum.

The video showed children and women sitting in the university's outdoor courtyards with their luggage, without food or other supplies.

Since April 15, Sudanese states have been witnessing large-scale clashes between the army led by Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the Rapid Support Forces led by Mohamed Hamdan Daglo (Hemedti), followed by Arab and Western countries moving to evacuate their citizens from Khartoum either by military aviation or by ship.