
Hunger mounts, cemeteries grow in Sudan's besieged Al-Fashir
Al-Fashir, the capital of North Darfur state, is the biggest remaining frontline in the region between Sudan's army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), under fire at a pivotal point in a civil war now well into its third year.
'The RSF's artillery and drones are shelling Al-Fashir morning and night,' one resident told Reuters. Electricity was completely shut down, bakeries were closed and medical supplies scarce, he added.
'The number of people dying has increased every day and the cemeteries are expanding,' he said.
The war between the Sudanese army and the RSF erupted in April 2023 when the former allies clashed over plans to integrate their forces.
The RSF made quick gains in central Sudan, including the capital Khartoum, but the army
pushed them westward this year, leading to an intensification in fighting in Al-Fashir.
The city's fall would give the RSF control over nearly all of Darfur — a vast region bordering Libya, Chad, Central African Republic and South Sudan — and pave the way for what analysts say could be Sudan's de facto division.
Besieged along with the army and its allies are hundreds of thousands of Al-Fashir's residents and people displaced by previous attacks, many living in camps that monitors say are already in famine.
One doctor, who asked not to be named for her safety, said hunger was an even bigger problem than the shelling.
'The children are malnourished, the adults are malnourished. Even I today haven't had any breakfast because I can't find anything,' she said.
The RSF has blocked food supplies and aid convoys trying to reach the city have been attacked, locals said. Prices for the goods traders are able to smuggle in cost more than five times the national average.
Many people have resorted to eating hay or ambaz, a type of animal feed made out of peanut shells, residents told Reuters. One advocacy group said even ambaz was running out.
The RSF, which has its roots in the Janjaweed militias accused of atrocities in Darfur in the early 2000s, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
RISKS OF FLIGHT
Many residents fleeing the city have sought shelter in Tawila, about 60 km (40 miles) west. Some of those who made it told Reuters they were attacked by groups of RSF fighters along the way.
'We fled to Shagra (village) first before getting to Tawila and they attacked us again,' 19-year-old Enaam Abdallah said.
'If they find your phone, they take it. Money, they take it. A donkey or anything, they'll take it. They killed people in front of us and kidnapped girls in front of us,' she said.
On Monday, Emergency Lawyers, a human rights group, said at least 14 people fleeing Al-Fashir were killed and dozens injured when they were attacked in a village along the route.
Tawila is hosting more than half a million displaced people, most of whom have arrived since April, when the RSF stepped up its assault on Al-Fashir and attacked the massive Zamzam displacement camp to the city's south.
But Tawila offers little aid or shelter, as humanitarian organizations are stretched by foreign aid cuts. People who arrived there told Reuters they receive small amounts of grain, including sorghum and rice, but amounts were varying and insufficient.
Sudan is in the throes of the rainy season, which in combination with poor living conditions and inadequate sanitation has led to an outbreak of cholera.
Since mid-June, aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres has treated 2,500 cases of cholera, a spokesperson told Reuters.
Some 52 people have died from the disease, according to the Coordinating Committee for Displaced People, a Sudanese advocacy group that operates across Darfur.
Vaccines needed to stem the outbreak, if provided, will take time to arrive given the rains.
An assessment by the Norwegian Refugee Council found that only 10 percent of people in Tawila had reliable access to water, and even fewer had access to latrines. Most families report eating one meal a day or less, the organization said.
'We don't have houses to protect us from the rain and we don't have tarps. We have to wait for the rain to stop for the children to sleep,' mother-of-four Huda Ali said as she sat among roofless shelters made of straw.
She said she tried to make sure her children washed their hands and only ate food that had been properly heated.
The United Nations called for a humanitarian pause to fighting in Al-Fashir last month as the rainy season began, but the RSF rejected the call.
Fighting has also raged across Sudan's
Kordofan region,which borders Darfur, as the two sides fight to demarcate clear zones of control amid stalled mediation efforts.
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Saudi Gazette
10 hours ago
- Saudi Gazette
'Our children are dying': Rare footage shows plight of civilians in besieged Sudan city
NAIROBI — The women at the community kitchen in the besieged Sudanese city of el-Fasher are sitting in huddles of desperation. "Our children are dying before our eyes," one of them tells the BBC. "We don't know what to do. They are innocent. They have nothing to do with the army or [its paramilitary rival] the Rapid Support Forces. Our suffering is worse than what you can imagine." Food is so scarce in el-Fasher that prices have soared to the point where money that used to cover a week's worth of meals can now buy only one. International aid organisations have condemned the "calculated use of starvation as a weapon of war". The BBC has obtained rare footage of people still trapped in the city, sent to us by a local activist and filmed by a freelance cameraman. The Sudanese army has been battling the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) for more than two years after their commanders jointly staged a coup, and then fell in the western Darfur region, is one of the most brutal frontlines in the hunger crisis is compounded by a surge of cholera sweeping through the squalid camps of those displaced by the fighting, which escalated this week into one of the most intense RSF attacks on the city paramilitaries tightened their 14-month blockade after losing control of the capital Khartoum earlier this year, and stepped up their battle for el-Fasher, the last foothold of the armed forces in the north and centre of the country where the army has wrestled back territory from the RSF, food and medical aid have begun to make a dent in civilian the situation is desperate in the conflict zones of western and southern the Matbakh-al-Khair communal kitchen in el-Fasher late last month, volunteers turned ambaz into a porridge. This is the residue of peanuts after the oil has been extracted, normally fed to it is possible to find sorghum or millet but on the day of filming, the kitchen manager says: "There is no flour or bread.""Now we've reached the point of eating ambaz. May God relieve us of this calamity, there's nothing left in the market to buy," he UN has amplified its appeal for a humanitarian pause to allow food convoys into the city, with its Sudan envoy Sheldon Yett once more demanding this week that the warring sides observe their obligations under international army has given clearance for the trucks to proceed but the UN is still waiting for official word from the paramilitary advisers have said they believed the truce would be used to facilitate the delivery of food and ammunition to the army's "besieged militias" inside have also claimed the paramilitary group and its allies were setting up "safe routes" for civilians to leave the responders in el-Fasher can receive some emergency cash via a digital banking system, but it does not go very far."The prices in the markets have exploded," says Mathilde Vu, advocacy manager for the Norwegian Refugee Council."Today, $5,000 [£3,680] covers one meal for 1,500 people in a single day. Three months ago, the same amount could feed them for an entire week."Doctors say people are dying of malnutrition. It is impossible to know how many — one report quoting a regional health official put the number at more than 60 last cannot cope. Few are still operating. They have been damaged by shelling and are short of medical supplies to help both the starving, and those injured in the continual bombardment."We have many malnourished children admitted in hospital but unfortunately there is no single sachet of [therapeutic food]," says Dr Ibrahim Abdullah Khater, a paediatrician at the Al Saudi Hospital, noting that the five severely malnourished children currently in the ward also have medical complications."They are just waiting for their death," he hunger crises hit, those who usually die first are the most vulnerable, the least healthy or those suffering from pre-existing conditions."The situation, it is so miserable, it is so catastrophic," the doctor tells us in a voice message."The children of el-Fasher are dying on a daily basis due to lack of food, lack of medicine. Unfortunately, the international community is just watching."International non-governmental organisations working in Sudan issued an urgent statement this week declaring that "sustained attacks, obstruction of aid and targeting of critical infrastructure demonstrate a deliberate strategy to break the civilian population through hunger, fear, and exhaustion".They said that "anecdotal reports of recent food hoarding for military use add to the suffering of civilians"."There is no safe passage out of the city, with roads blocked and those attempting to flee facing attacks, taxation at checkpoints, community-based discrimination and death," the organisations of thousands of people did flee in recent months, many from the Zamzam displaced persons camp at the edge of el-Fasher, seized by the RSF in arrive in Tawila, a town 60km (37 miles) west of the city, weak and dehydrated, with accounts of violence and extortion along the road from RSF-allied is safer in the crowded camps, but they are stalked by disease — most deadly of all: is caused by polluted water and has killed hundreds in Sudan, triggered by the destruction of water infrastructure and lack of food and medical care, and made worse by flooding due to the rainy el-Fasher, in Tawila aid workers at least have access, but their supplies are limited, says John Joseph Ocheibi, the on-site project coordinator for a group called The Alliance for International Medical Action."We have shortages in terms of [washing facilities], in terms of medical supplies, to be able to deal with this situation," he tells the BBC. "We are mobilizing resources to see how best we can be able to respond."Sylvain Penicaud of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) estimates there are only three litres of water per person per day in the camps, which, he says, is "way below the basic need, and forces people to get water from contaminated sources".Zubaida Ismail Ishaq is lying in the tent clinic. She is seven months pregnant, gaunt and exhausted. Her story is a tale of trauma told by tells us she used to trade when she had a little money, before fleeing husband was captured by armed men on the road to Tawila. Her daughter has a head and her mother came down with cholera shortly after arriving in the camp."We drink water without boiling it," she says. "We have no-one to get us water. Since coming here, I have nothing left."Back in el-Fasher we hear appeals for help from the women clustered at the soup kitchen — any kind of help."We're exhausted. We want this siege lifted," says Faiza Abkar Mohammed. "Even if they airdrop food, airdrop anything — we're completely exhausted." — BBC


Arab News
10 hours ago
- Arab News
KSrelief provides critical relief to displaced, flood-stricken communities
DUBAI: Saudi Arabia's aid agency, KSrelief, has continued its humanitarian projects in Syria, Yemen, Sudan and Pakistan, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Wednesday. In Syria, the agency distributed 349 food parcels to displaced people in Daraa, while in Sudan it delivered 830 parcels to residents of Karari. In Pakistan, KSrelief distributed 2,680 food parcels to communities affected by flooding, benefiting more than 16,000 people. Meanwhile in Yemen, the agency continued its water supply and sanitation project in Hodeidah, pumping 1.5 million liters of water into the community. It also carried out 49 waste removal operations in camps for displaced people, benefiting 16,170 individuals.


Asharq Al-Awsat
5 days ago
- Asharq Al-Awsat
Volunteers Help Families Give Khartoum War Dead Proper Burials
In Sudan's war-scarred capital Khartoum, Red Crescent volunteers have begun the grisly task of exhuming the dead from makeshift plots where they were buried during the fighting so their families can give them a proper funeral. Teams of workers in dust-streaked white hazmat suits comb vacant lots, looking for the spots where survivors say they buried their loved ones. Mechanical diggers peel back layers of earth under the watchful eye of Hisham Zein al-Abdeen, head of the city's forensic medicine department. "We're finding graves everywhere -- in front of homes, inside schools and mosques," he told AFP, surveying the scene. "Every day we discover new ones." Here, in the southern neighborhood of Al-Azhari, families buried their loved ones wherever they could, as fighting raged between the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF). When war broke out in April 2023, the RSF quickly swept through Khartoum, occupying entire districts as residents fled air and artillery bombardments and street fighting. In March, the army and its allies recaptured the capital in a fierce offensive. It is only now, after the front lines of the conflict moved elsewhere, that bereaved families can give their loved ones a proper burial. - 'Proper burial' - "My daughter was only 12," said Jawaher Adam, standing by a shallow makeshift grave, tears streaming down her face. "I had only sent her out to buy shoes when she died. We couldn't take her to the cemetery. We buried her in the neighborhood," she told AFP. Months on, Adam has come to witness her daughter's reburial -- this time, she says, with dignity. Each body is disinfected, wrapped and labelled by Red Crescent volunteers before being transported to Al-Andalus cemetery, 10 kilometers (six miles) away. "It's painful," said Adam, "but to honor the dead is to give them a proper burial." Many of the war's deadliest battlegrounds have been densely populated residential districts, often without access to hospitals to care for the wounded or count the dead. That has made it nearly impossible to establish a firm death toll for the war. Former US envoy Tom Perriello has said that some estimates suggest up to 150,000 people were killed in the conflict's first year alone. In the capital, more than 61,000 people died during the first 14 months of war -- a 50 percent increase on the pre-war death rate -- according to the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Of those deaths, 26,000 were attributed to violence. - 'Tip of the iceberg' - At first glance, the vacant lot in Al-Azhari where Red Crescent volunteers are digging seems to be full of litter -- pieces of wood, bricks, an old signpost. Look more closely, however, and it becomes clear they have been placed in straight lines, each one marking a makeshift grave. Volunteers exhumed 317 graves in that one lot, Zein al-Abdeen said. Similar mass graves have been uncovered across the capital, he said, with 2,000 bodies reburied so far. But his team estimates there could be 10,000 bodies buried in makeshift graves across the city. At the exhumation site, grieving mothers watch on silently, their hands clasped tightly to their chest. They, like Adam, are among the lucky few who know where their loved ones are buried. Many do not. At least 8,000 people were reported missing in Sudan last year, in what the International Committee of the Red Cross says is only "the tip of the iceberg". For now, authorities label unclaimed bodies, and keep their details on file. With the bodies now exhumed, the community can have some degree of closure, and the vacant lot can be repurposed. "Originally, this site was designated as a school," said Youssef Mohamed al-Amin, executive director of Jebel Awliya district. "We're moving the bodies so it can serve its original purpose." The United Nations estimates that up to two million people may return to Khartoum state by the end of the year -- but much depends on whether security and basic services can be restored. Before the war, greater Khartoum was home to nine million people, according to the UN Development Program, but the conflict has displaced at least 3.5 million. For now, much of the capital remains without power or running water, as hospitals and schools lie in ruins.