Sudanese RSF paramilitaries kill 100s in White Nile state
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Map showing location of White Nile state, Sudan.
Attacks by Sudan's
paramilitary Rapid Support Force have killed hundreds of civilians, including
infants, in White Nile state, Sudanese officials and rights groups said
Tuesday.
Sudan's Foreign Ministry said in a statement that the
paramilitary group targeted civilians in the past few days in villages in the
al-Gitaina area after they were "overwhelmed by its devastating
defeat" by the Sudanese army.
The statement put the death
toll at 433, while the Preliminary Committee of Sudan Doctors' Trade Union put
that figure at 300.
Emergency Lawyers, a rights group tracking violence against
civilians, said in a statement Tuesday morning that more than 200 people,
including women and children, were killed in RSF attacks and hundreds of others
were injured over the past three days.
"The attacks included executions, kidnapping, forced
disappearance, looting, and shooting those trying to escape," the group
said.
Minister of Culture and Information Khalid Ali Aleisir said
on Facebook that recent attacks by the RSF in Al-Kadaris and Al-Khalwat
villages in White Nile state are the latest "systematic violence against
defenseless civilians."
The Sudanese military said Saturday it had advanced in White
Nile and "liberated more cities and villages," cutting crucial supply
routes to the RSF, a rival group it has battled for control of the country
since April 2023.
The war in Sudan has killed more than 24,000 people and
driven more than 14 million people — about 30% of the population — from their
homes, according to the United Nations. An estimated 3.2 million Sudanese have
escaped to neighboring countries.
The U.N. on Tuesday said that throughout 2024, its human
rights office documented more than 4,200 civilian killings, adding that the
total number is likely much higher.
The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
appealed on Monday for $6 billion for its 2025 humanitarian response in Sudan,
to help about 21 million people in the country and the millions who fled the
war abroad.
"This is a humanitarian crisis that is truly
unprecedented in its scale and gravity," said U.N. aid chief Tom Fletcher
in a statement, "and it demands a response unprecedented in scale and
intent."
Meanwhile, Norwegian Minister of International Development
Asmund Aukrust denounced the escalation in violence and attacks against
civilians.
"I am deeply concerned about the sharp increase in
civilian deaths caused by the intensified conflict in Sudan. I am also shocked
by reports of indiscriminate attacks against civilians and civilian
infrastructure. Any such attacks must stop immediately," Aukrust said in a
statement published on the web portal for the Norwegian government.
The developments on the ground have given the military the
upper hand in the war as the paramilitary suffered multiple blows, including
losing control of the city of Wad Medani, the capital of Gezira province, and
other areas in the province.
The Sudanese military also
regained control of the country's largest oil refinery. The RSF appears to have
lost control of the Greater Khartoum area and the cities of Omdurman and
Khartoum Bahri.
The war has shown no end in
sight despite international mediation attempts, including a U.S. assessment
that the RSF and its proxies are committing genocide.
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