A spokesperson for the heritage railway said buses had been arranged to return all visitors to their stations on Saturday.
Since the appearance of drones in Sudan’s skies, the situation on the ground has partially changed.The Sudanese army has managed to break the siege imposed on its soldiers in several locations.
And the RSF has withdrawn from some neighbourhoods west of the capital.According to Mr Baldo, this change has happened thanks to the Iranian drones.After more than a year of war, at least 16,650 civilians have been killed, according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (Acled).
The UN estimates that about nine million people have been forced from their homes - more than in any other current conflict.Abdullah Makkawi is one who has now fled to Egypt. When he was still in southern Khartoum last July, he says he narrowly escaped death when drones, which he says belonged to the RSF, attacked.
“I rushed into the house, and we took refuge in a room with a concrete roof... My mother, four siblings and I hid under the beds,” he says.
Mr Makkawi says they heard the sound of a drone shell falling onto the next room, which had a wooden roof.In 2024, a council director warned that the Military Road, which runs near Atherfield Point,
A "passport" for hikers on the Coast to Coast footpath has proved a hit with walkers and local businesses, with more than 750 sold since it was launched.The booklet allows people to collect 29 stamps along the 190 mile (305km) walk, which stretches from St Bees Head in Cumbria to Robin Hood's Bay in North Yorkshire.
Launched in March, the 140-page document encourages people to visit shops, pubs and visitor attractions dotted along the route.Donald Cline, who helped devise the scheme, said he hoped the passport would become a "memento" for walkers to cherish.