Over 200 killed in three-day Sudan paramilitary assault: lawyers

Over 200 civilians, including women and children, were killed in a three-day assault by Sudan’s RSF paramilitaries, with reports of executions, kidnappings, and looting.


Sudanese paramilitaries have killed more than 200 people, including women and children, in a three-day assault on villages in the country’s south, a lawyer group monitoring the war said Tuesday.

The Emergency Lawyers group, which documents rights abuses, said the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces attacked unarmed civilians in the villages of Al-Kadaris and Al-Khelwat, in White Nile state.

The RSF carried out “executions, kidnappings, enforced disappearances and property looting” during the assault since Saturday, which also left hundreds wounded or missing, it said.

The lawyer group said some residents were shot at while attempting to flee across the Nile River. Some drowned in the process, with the lawyers calling the attack an act of “genocide”.

Sudan’s army-aligned foreign ministry said the death toll from the RSF attacks so far was 433 civilians, including babies. It called the assault a “horrible massacre”.

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Both the army and the RSF have been accused of war crimes, but the paramilitaries have been specifically notorious for committing ethnic cleansing and systematic sexual violence.

The war has killed tens of thousands, displaced over 12 million and created what the International Rescue Committee has called the “biggest humanitarian crisis ever recorded”.

‘Bodies lying on the streets’

White Nile state is currently divided by the warring parties.

The army controls southern parts, including the state capital, Rabak, as well as two major cities and a key military base.

The RSF meanwhile holds northern parts of the state, bordering the capital Khartoum, which include several villages and towns and where the latest attacks took place.

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Witnesses from the two villages, about 90 kilometres (55 miles) south of Khartoum, said thousands of residents fled their homes, crossing to the western bank of the Nile following RSF shelling.

A medical source speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity for their safety on Monday said some bodies were lying in the streets while others were killed inside their homes with no one able to reach them.

Fighting has intensified in recent weeks as the army advances in its bid to reclaim full control of the capital from paramilitaries.

The UN’s children agency, UNICEF, said on Sunday that those trapped in areas and around the fighting in Khartoum had reported indiscriminate shooting, looting, and forced displacement, as well as alarming accounts of families being separated, children missing, detained or abducted and sexual violence.

Many children, it added, showed signs of distress having witnessed the events around them.

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“This is a living nightmare for children, and it must end,” said Sheldon Yett, UNICEF representative for Sudan.

Elsewhere, RSF shelling and gunfire shook the streets this week in a famine-hit camp near North Darfur’s besieged capital El-Fasher in the country’s west.

Hundreds of families fled the violence to neighbouring towns with civilians saying that they were robbed and attacked on the roads.

The Zamzam camp, home to between 500,000 and a million people according to aid groups, was the first place famine was declared in Sudan last August under a UN-backed assessment.

– By: © Agence France-Presse

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