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Villagers offer harrowing accounts of one of the deadliest attacks in Sudan's civil war

Villagers offer harrowing accounts of one of the deadliest attacks in Sudan's civil war

Arab News20 hours ago
CAIRO: When Ahlam Saeed awoke last month to the sound of gunfire and roaring vehicle motors, the 43-year-old widow rushed outside her home in war-torn Sudan to find a line of at least two dozen vehicles, many of them motorcycles carrying armed fighters.'They were firing at everything and in every direction,' the mother of four said. 'In an instant, all of us in the village were fleeing for safety.' Many people were gunned down in their houses or while trying to flee. At least 200 people were killed, including many women and children, in the community of straw homes, according to a rights group tracking Sudan's civil war.Saeed and her children — ages 9 to 15 — were among those who survived after rebel fighters rampaged through Shag Al-Num, the small farming village of several thousand people in Sudan's Kordofan region. In interviews with The Associated Press, Saeed and four other villagers described the July 12 attack, one of the deadliest assaults since the war began more than two years ago over a power struggle between commanders of the military and the rival paramilitary group known as the Rapid Support Forces, or RSF.The villagers' accounts add to the devastating toll of the conflict, which started in April 2023 and has wrecked the country in northeastern African. The fighting has killed more than 40,000 people, displaced as many as 14 million, caused disease outbreaks and pushed many places to the brink of famine.Atrocities, including mass killings of civilians and mass rape, have also been reported, particularly in Darfur, triggering an investigation by the International Criminal Court into potential war crimes and crimes against humanity.'Hell's door was opened'The villagers from Shag Al-Num said RSF fighters and their allied Janjaweed militias stormed into the community, looting houses and robbing residents, especially of women's gold. Some victims were held at gunpoint.Some young villagers attempted to fight back by taking up rifles to defend their homes. The RSF fighters knocked them down and continued their rampage, witnesses said.'It was as if the hell's door was opened,' Saeed said, sobbing. Her straw house and neighboring homes were burned down, and one RSF fighter seized her necklace. 'We were dying of fear,' she said.The villagers said the fighters also sexually abused or raped many women. One of the women said she saw three fighters wearing RSF uniforms dragging a young woman into an abandoned house. She said she later met the woman, who said she was raped.Satellite imagery from July 13 and 14 showed 'intentional arson attacks' and 'a large smoke point' over the village as well as 'razed and smoldering' buildings, the Humanitarian Research Lab at the Yale School of Public Health reported.In the two-day RSF attack in Shaq Al-Noum and surrounding areas, more than 450 civilians, including 35 children and two pregnant women, were killed, according to UNICEF.After the assault, many of the survivors fled, leaving behind a mostly deserted village.The RSF did not respond to questions about the attack from the AP.Both sides seek control of oil-rich Kordofan regionBeyond the village, the oil-rich Kordofan region has emerged as a major front line following the military's recapture of Khartoum earlier this year. The warring parties have raced for control of the three-province region stretching across southern and central Sudan because it controls vital supply lines.'Kordofan has become the most strategic area of the country,' said Cameron Hudson, an Africa expert with the Center for Strategic and International Studies.The fighting has exacerbated the already dire conditions in the region.In Kadugli, the provincial capital city of South Kordofan province, 'roads have been cut off, supply lines have collapsed and residents are walking miles just to search for salt or matches,' said Kadry Furany, country director for Sudan at Mercy Corps aid group.A mental health therapist in Obeid, the provincial capital of North Kordofan province, said the city received waves of displaced people in recent weeks, all from areas recently ambushed by the RSF.The therapist, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of concerns about her safety, said she supported 10 women and girls who endured sexual abuse, including rape, in RSF-seized areas in July alone. Among the victims were two women from Shag Al-Num village, she said.'The conditions are tragic,' she said.Another epicenter of starvation and diseaseTo the west of the Kordofan region is el-Fasher, the military's last stronghold in the five-province Darfur region. The city — which has been under constant RSF bombardment for over a year — is one of the hardest hit by hunger and disease outbreaks, according to the UNThe World Food Program has been unable to deliver aid by land. It warned this month that 300,000 people, who are 'trapped, hungry and running out of time,' are at risk of starvation.'Everyone in el-Fasher is facing a daily struggle to survive,' said Eric Perdison, the food program's director for eastern and southern Africa. 'Without immediate and sustained access, lives will be lost.'The paramilitaries and their Janjaweed allies imposed a total blockade of el-Fasher, leaving no route out of the city that the RSF does not control, according to satellite imagery recently analyzed by the humanitarian lab at Yale.The blockade caused food prices to spike up to 460 percent higher than in the rest of Sudan, according to the African Center for Justice and Peace Studies. Most staples are scarce or no longer available.Civilians who want to leave the city are required to pass through a single RSF-controlled point, where they have been robbed, forced to pay bribes or killed, according to the Yale lab, aid workers and residents.On Aug. 2, a group of people, including women and children, attempted to flee the city. When they reached Garni, a village on a crucial supply route just northwest of the city, RSF fighters ambushed the area, residents said.'They tell you to leave, then they kill you,' said Al-Amin Ammar, a 63-year-old who said he escaped because he is old. 'It's a death trap.'At least 14 people were killed, and dozens of others were wounded in the village, said the Emergency Lawyers rights group said.Aside from fighting, the region has been ravaged by lack of food and a cholera outbreak, said Adam Regal, a spokesman for a local aid group known as General Coordination. Many people have nothing to eat and resorted to cattle fodder to survive, he said. Some have not found even fodder, he said.He shared images of emaciated children with their exhausted, malnourished mothers on the outskirts of el-Fasher or the nearby town of Tawila.'People don't await food or medicine,' he said, 'rather they await death.'The 12-year-old son of Sabah Hego, a widow, was admitted with cholera to a makeshift hospital in Tweila, joining dozens of other patients there.'He is sick, and dying,' Hego said of her youngest child. 'He is not alone. There are many like him.'
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Chinese company eyes building maritime industrial complex, green shipbreaking yard in Pakistan
Chinese company eyes building maritime industrial complex, green shipbreaking yard in Pakistan

Arab News

time2 hours ago

  • Arab News

Chinese company eyes building maritime industrial complex, green shipbreaking yard in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: A delegation of Chinese company Shandong Xinxu Group met Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday, expressing interest in building a maritime industrial complex in Pakistan and constructing a green shipbreaking yard in the country, Sharif's office said in a statement. Shandong Xinxu Group Co., Ltd. is a high-tech energy enterprise integrating the renewable energy industry chain, including dedicated battery equipment, nuclear power equipment, urban wastewater treatment projects and renewable smart energy storage systems. According to its website, Shandong Group's products have been exported to more than 40 countries and regions such as Pakistan, India, Tunisia and Belarus. Business at the shipyard has declined in recent years as Pakistan navigates a tricky path to recovery from a prolonged macroeconomic crisis. The shipbreaking industry has also taken a hit due to worldwide calls to stop beach scrapping because of the danger and environmental damage from pollutants left to drain into the sea. Sharif met Shandong Group's delegation, led by its chairman Hou Jianxin in Islamabad, the PMO said. During the meeting, Sharif invited Chinese industries to invest in Pakistan, assuring them that the government will provide all possible facilities for the establishment of Special Economic Zones. 'Shandong is interested in establishing a maritime industrial complex in Pakistan,' the statement said. 'The Chinese company will build a green shipbreaking yard in Pakistan.' During the meeting, the two sides were also briefed that Pakistan has immense potential in the ship-breaking and ship recycling sectors. Gadani in Pakistan's southwestern Balochistan province once used to be one of the world's main destinations for end-of-life vessels. Here, old and decommissioned ships were regularly dismantled and their parts, especially steel, were recycled, reused or resold. In June, Pakistan's government approved Rs12 billion [$42 million] to transform the Gadani ship-breaking yard into a 'model green facility' to reduce pollution and manage hazardous waste, the maritime affairs ministry had said. During the meeting, both sides were also briefed that the Chinese enterprise aims to benefit from Pakistan's potential in fishing, fish processing and in the processing of date fruits. Pakistan has been pushing for foreign investment in its key economic sectors ever since it came to the brink of a sovereign default in 2023 before an International Monetary Fund loan program helped it avert the crisis. Pakistan considers China a key regional, economic and strategic partner. Since 2013, Beijing has invested tens of billions of dollars in energy and infrastructure projects in Pakistan as part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, a major segment of China's Belt and Road Initiative that aims to build land and maritime trade routes linking Asia with Africa and Europe.

How religious extremism and settler attacks are eroding the Christian presence in Israel and the West Bank
How religious extremism and settler attacks are eroding the Christian presence in Israel and the West Bank

Arab News

time7 hours ago

  • Arab News

How religious extremism and settler attacks are eroding the Christian presence in Israel and the West Bank

LONDON: Harassment, violence and displacement have become a daily reality for Palestinians across the occupied West Bank, where attacks by Israeli settlers — allegedly with the protection or tacit approval of the army and government — have spread unchecked. Religious minorities, including the West Bank's various Christian denominations, have not been spared amid the violence. On Aug. 7, settlers illegally seized land belonging to the Greek Orthodox Monastery of Abba Gerasimos of the Jordan in Jericho. Just days earlier, another group stormed Taybeh, the only entirely Christian village in the West Bank, home to Greek Orthodox, Melkite and Catholic residents. Masked and armed, the assailants reportedly set vehicles ablaze, sprayed graffiti and released livestock. It was the second such raid in as many weeks. A fortnight earlier, settlers had torched the ancient Church of Saint George and desecrated its adjoining graveyard. 'They have always done this around the village, but nowadays they dare to go inside,' Buthina Khoury, a Greek Orthodox filmmaker who grew up in Taybeh, told Arab News. 'My cousin the other day opened her window and she saw the settler just outside her house, just in the backyard of her house.' Although nobody was killed in these raids, attacks such as these reflect a pattern of escalating settler abuse that is rarely prosecuted by Israeli authorities. The same week, Israel's Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich approved a highly controversial plan to advance 3,401 new housing units in the E1 settlement, a move that would split the West Bank in two and sever it from East Jerusalem. These settlements are deemed illegal under international law and would make any future contiguous Palestinian state even harder to realize. The move, widely condemned by the international community, risks deepening an already volatile situation, further entrenching a dynamic in which nationalist and colonialist ideologies are intertwined with Jewish religious extremism. 'The whole situation has been very, very critical and very sensitive, and what's happening in the rest of Palestine, it affects Taybeh as well,' said Khoury. 'They are trying to turn our life into misery.' For decades, Taybeh — a village mentioned in the Gospel of John where Jesus is said to have stayed before his entry into Jerusalem and eventual death on the cross — had been largely spared from settler violence. That is now changing. Recent attacks have drawn international figures to the village, including Roman Catholic Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa and US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee. But Khoury says such visits do little to change the reality on the ground. 'What happened in Taybeh is the least compared to what happened to the villages and towns nearby,' she said, adding that such visits 'do nothing' but 'show a fake solidarity.' Christian minorities such as Khoury's, arguably more at risk than any other Palestinian community, have steadily dwindled in the West Bank. In 1922, in what was then Mandatory Palestine, Christians made up about 11 percent of the population. Today they account for less than 1 percent. Bethlehem, once 85 percent Christian, is now home to just 10 percent. A 2020 study by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research and the Philos Project found that political instability, residency permit restrictions for married couples and clergy, frustration with the stalled peace process and economic hardship were drivers of this decline. About 40 percent of Christian respondents also reported feeling discriminated against by fellow Palestinians. Khoury said the situation has shifted dramatically since the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel triggered the war in Gaza. Violence has simultaneously escalated in the West Bank, and Christians are being used to fuel a narrative of division. Indeed, Khoury said Israeli policies had been designed to drive a wedge between religious groups. 'It's the policy of every occupier,' she said. 'We Palestinian Christians or Palestinian Muslims — we don't feel separate from each other.' Regardless of any deliberate effort to divide Palestinians along these lines, Khoury said settlers are not targeting Christians solely for their religious identity, but rather aiming to purge the West Bank of any and all non-Jewish peoples. The UN has recorded a sharp rise in settler violence this year. In the first half of 2025 alone, it documented in excess of 700 attacks — more than triple the number for all of 2023. Between Jan. 1 and Aug. 11, Israeli authorities also 'punitively demolished or sealed 23 homes and four other structures,' displacing about 140 people, including 57 children — the highest level of displacement in such a short period since 2009. The monthly average of Palestinians injured by settlers also doubled in June and July to about 100, compared with 49 per month in the first five months of the year. But the pressures faced by Christians are not confined to the occupied territories. Within Israel itself, Christian communities — long perceived as relatively secure — are reporting a surge in harassment and hostility. 'In recent years, the Christian community in the Holy Land has faced a rise in violence and intimidation, targeting both clergy and faithful,' Bishop William Shomali, patriarchal vicar for Jerusalem and Palestine, told Arab News. 'These incidents reflect a growing climate of hostility that threatens peaceful coexistence and religious freedom.' Shomali, a Catholic who grew up in the Christian-majority town of Beit Sahour near Bethlehem, said members of the clergy had been spat on by Jewish extremists while walking in religious attire or during processions in Jerusalem's Old City. Church walls and properties have been vandalized with hateful graffiti in Hebrew. Often filmed and shared online, these acts, he said, 'express clear contempt for the Christian presence in the Holy City.' Attacks against Christians in Israel have risen sharply in recent months, shaped in part by the post-Oct. 7 political climate. A recent report by the Rossing Center for Education and Dialogue — a Jerusalem-based interreligious organization promoting ties between Jews, Christians and Muslims — documented 111 cases of harassment in 2024, with physical assaults being the most common. The figure, almost certainly an undercount given the community's reluctance to report such incidents, marks a 30 percent increase compared with 2023. 'The problem is much bigger and wider than that,' Hannah Bendcowsky, the center's program director, told Arab News. 'We're talking about the legitimizing of violence toward minorities, the normalization of violence and anti-Christian attacks, the lack of condemnation from authorities, and the lack of proper reaction from police forces.' These actions, she said, not only endanger the Christian community but have long-term consequences for Israeli society as a whole. While Israel's Christian population grew slightly in 2023 — by about 0.6 percent — Bendcowsky warned that persistent harassment is fueling what she called a 'slow emigration.' The community numbers about 180,000 people — around 80 percent of them Arab Christians. Yet they experience what she described as a 'double minority' status — marginalized as both Christians and Palestinians within Israeli society. 'The main question is, when an Israeli meets a Palestinian Christian, what do they see? A Palestinian or a Christian? Or I should be more accurate. When they meet a Palestinian Christian, when do they see him as a Christian and when do they see him as a Palestinian?' Bendcowsky said longstanding religious tensions have been deliberately instrumentalized by Israeli leaders since Oct. 7, deepening polarization and mistrust that extend beyond minorities to affect Israeli Jewish communities as well. She emphasized the need for a broader contextual understanding of these incidents to fully grasp the wider dynamics affecting the Christian community, whereby some attacks can be deemed anti-Palestinian while others distinctly anti-Christian. 'We do relate to the attacks of settlers, but I would say that it's a different kind of attack,' she said. 'The harassment we see in Jerusalem and in Israel against Christians is anti-Christian. So it's not because they are Palestinian, but it's because they're Christian. And most of the people being attacked are not Palestinians. They're foreign Christians. 'While the incident in Taybeh is not anti-Christian per se, it's anti-Palestinian. And this is part of a wider phenomena that, to my understanding, is ignored by the international community.' Bishop Shomali described an 'emotional shift' since Oct. 7 that has provoked a 'noticeable increase in hatred and mistrust' across the region. 'What used to be a tense coexistence has now turned into a more hostile and polarized atmosphere,' he said. 'People express fear, sadness and a sense of loss — not only of physical safety but also of hope for peaceful relations.' While much remains to be done to address the situation in the West Bank, some local efforts have emerged to curb harassment in Israel. Jewish volunteers have begun accompanying Christian clergy and pilgrims during major processions in Jerusalem, documenting incidents of spitting or other abuse and reporting them to the police. 'There is a growing sense that the Israeli police are now more seriously committed to addressing specific issues, particularly the spitting incidents and anti-Christian graffiti in Jerusalem,' said Shomali. However, he cautioned that while these measures are 'meaningful and appreciated,' they remain limited in scope, addressing the problem within Israel without tackling the broader context that has fostered instability and mistrust for decades. For Shomali, the heart of the issue lies deeper than religious tensions. 'Interreligious dialogue, though valuable, cannot by itself resolve the deeper and more complex issue of the land's ownership,' he said. 'The core of the conflict lies in two national narratives — Palestinian and Jewish — that are often contradictory and deeply rooted in historical, political and religious claims. 'Religion is not just a spiritual identity in this context; it is interwoven into each narrative, which makes compromise particularly difficult to achieve.'

120 Aid Workers Killed in Sudan Since War Began
120 Aid Workers Killed in Sudan Since War Began

Asharq Al-Awsat

time11 hours ago

  • Asharq Al-Awsat

120 Aid Workers Killed in Sudan Since War Began

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) described on Tuesday the war in Sudan as one of the deadliest for aid workers anywhere in the world. 'Since the current conflict began in April 2023, more than 120 humanitarian personnel have been killed — nearly all of them Sudanese,' said OCHA coordinator in Sudan Luca Renda. As the agency marks World Humanitarian Day, Renda warned that violations of international humanitarian law have become disturbingly common. Humanitarian aid workers in Sudan have faced increased threats, including arbitrary detention, kidnapping, and attacks that result in injury and death. Despite these threats, Renda said, Sudanese humanitarians continue to deliver. 'They cross frontlines. They navigate insecurity and bureaucracy. They risk everything to reach people in need. They have not given up — and neither must we.' The victims, Renda noted, include medics, drivers, volunteers and other staff members who showed up every day to serve their communities with courage and compassion. 'Their deaths are a stain on our collective conscience and a stark reminder of the growing dangers faced by those who deliver life-saving aid,' he stressed. Renda explained that violations of international humanitarian law have become disturbingly common. 'Every red line crossed is met with impunity, indifference and failure to act. This must stop.' He called on all those engaged in the conflict in Sudan to meet their obligations under international law, protect civilians, uphold the rules of war, guarantee safe and unimpeded access, and ensure that humanitarian personnel can operate safely, independently and without interference. In view of the massive humanitarian needs in Sudan, he also urged donors to increase flexible funding to sustain and scale up life-saving operations across the country. In its third year, the war in Sudan displaced more than 12.4 million people from their homes– including over 3.3 million refugees who have fled to neighboring countries.

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