Thousands of Sudanese fled the overcrowded camps after the air raids

Tens of thousands of Sudanese have fled the overcrowded camps to escape reported atrocilitives with increasing force since the capture of El-Fasher in West Darfur region, The AID team then said Saturday. The UN human rights chief warned that many others were still being held.
Those who reach the shelter in Tawila, about 43 miles away El FasherThey found themselves set up in a barren area with adequate tents, many of them improvised from tarps and dotted sheets, according to a video posted by Sudan’s IDPs and refugee camps. It shows children running around the area as a few adults carrying a large jar of food, hoping it will be enough to feed the growing crowds.
Since the ground forces are fast caught by El-Fasher From the battle rivals Oct. 26, more than 16,200 people fled to camps in Tawila, said Adam Rojal, spokesperson for the AID group. The International Organization for Migration estimates that around 82,000 people have fled the city and surrounding areas since November 4, heading for safer areas including previous attacks, with others making the journey on foot.
The RSF and the Sudanese army have been at war since April 2023, following a dispute over control of Africa’s third-largest country. At least 40,000 people have been killed, according to the World Health Organization, although the actual toll is likely much higher. About 12 million people have been displaced, and almost half of the population is experiencing severe food insecurity.
Last week, RSF captured El-Fasher after an 18-month siege. The combination of insomnia is full Saudi Hospital In the city, they killed more than 450 people, according to who, and they went from house to house, killing the villagers and sexually assaulting them. RSF has denied killing anyone in the Saudi hospital, but evidence from those fleeing, online videos and satellite images give an apocalyptic view of this attack.
Wing
Doctors without borders said on Friday that 300 people arrived in Tawila on Thursday alone after fleeing from El-Fasher. MSF groups reported “very high levels of malnutrition among children and adults.”
Those displaced from Tawila are in urgent need of food, medicine, shelter and psychological support, Rojal told the Associated Press. He said families often survive on two meals a day – and sometimes only.
The UN HUntu Human Rights Thwerk warned that those left behind in El-Fasher are at risk.
“Today, the traumatized citizens are still trapped inside El-Fasher and are prohibited from leaving,” said Friday in Geneva.
“I am afraid that despicable acts of violence such as summary executions, violence and morally motivated violence continue inside the city,” he added. “And for those who have managed to escape, the violence does not stop, as the ways out have become elements of unimaginable evil.”
On Thursday, The RSF said it agreed In the human link proposed by the mediator group led by USED known as the quad. At the time, the army said it accepted the quad’s proposal, but would only agree if the RSF withdrew from civilian areas and surrendered its weapons.
Fighting has spread across Darfur and into the neighboring Kordofan region, both of which have emerged as the focus of Sudan’s war in recent months. Earlier this week, a drone attack in El-Obeid, the capital of North Kordofan province, killed at least 40 people and injured dozens more.
A military official told the AP on Saturday that the forces had split into two The drones are made by the Chinese That aimed at El-Obeid on Saturday morning. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information.
Jalale Getachew Birru, an analyst in East Africa with an area of natural conflicts and event data, said in a statement on Tuesday of Friday that the fall of El-Fasher and the growing violence in North Kordofan Mark a good victory for the RSF, but it increases the suffering of the people. He estimated that at least 2,000 people were killed in Sudan in one week between Oct. 26 and November 1.
“These events not only deepen the humanitarian crisis in Sudan but also show the growing power of the RSF that has expanded into Central Sudan, threatening to reverse the success of the Sudanese armed forces and bring violence back to Central Sudan,” said Birru.


