 Reacting to the video in a press briefing, Dabir Eirilwa said the evacuation process was the tedious one and the challenges were expected. She also said the government was in touch with the students, noting that relevant agencies will resolve the situation in no time, according to earth. 13 bosses have departed from two universities in Khartoum, Kareem, a Nigerian student, to the Aswan border in Egypt. Other than the burying and investment changes, the first set of evacuees will be expected to arrive in the country on Friday. I've got no idea that the bosses, most confident students, but right now they are saying that if you don't pay us cash, we're not leaving, so that's a problem. So 13 bosses have departed, they should be arriving in a few hours, but even they should be there. Air peace should be leaving today, to be able to bring them back tomorrow. But 13 bosses have gone, that's about 1,500 already left. The remaining, the transportists are saying if you don't get the money, we're doing it now. So no more. We should have the humanitarian efforts must ensure that those monies are paid now, so that the others don't get stranded. And that people are just coming, coming, coming, coming. And that's what I'm talking about data. Now we have a list of students, 3,500 to 5,500, some are now coming from nowhere without