Dozens killed in attacks on Hit-Hit Darfur campsites star-news.press/wp

BBC News
AFPRepairs on the attacks on the camp on hundreds of thousands of people who fled in the Civil War of Sudan continued on the third day, the inhabitants told the BBC.
One person at the Zamzam camp described the situation as “catastrophic”, while another said they were “Dire”.
More than 100 civilians, at least 20 children and the medical team, were killed in a series of attacks that began at the end of last week in the West Darfur region, UN said.
At the attacks – in the city of El-Ofarher and two nearby camps – the defendants are in paramilitary for fast support (RSF). On Sunday, the group said that she took control of Zamzam, but refused crimes reports.
Camps, Zamzam and Abu Shouk, provide temporary homes to more than 700,000 people, many of which are faced with conditions similar to hungry.
The news about the attacks comes on the eve of the second anniversary of the beginning of the Civil War between the RSF and the Army.
Contacting the BBC on Sunday morning, one stay for Zamzam in the kitchen in the community that provides food for those in the camp, said “a large number of young people.”
“Those who worked in the kitchen in the community were killed, and doctors who were part of the hospital opening initiative were killed,” Mustafa said, 34, said in the WhatsApp audio message.
“My uncle and my cousin were killed. People were wounded, and there is no medication or hospital to save them – die from bleeding.
“Granarry is still ongoing, and we expect more attacks in the morning.”
He added that all routes from the camp were closed and it was “surrounded by all four directions.”
Another resident, wasir, he said “nothing (there was no) in Zamzum.”
“A large number of civilians fled, and we still try to leave, but we didn’t work, all the roads were blocked, and we have children with us.
“Death is everywhere. As I talk to you now from the trench, shelling happens.”
Some residents of the camp came out and made a journey of 15 km (nine miles) in El-Offfer, according to the Minister of Health North Darfur Ibrahim Khater.
“I respect a lot of people who walk from zams – mostly children, women and older people,” he said in the BBC message.
“Some were injured, tired and saying they lost their family – dead on the streets. The situation is catastrophic.”
UN Humanitarian coordinator in Sudan, Clementine Nkweta-Salami, said that “was disgusted and severely disturbed” by Darfur reports.
“This represents another deadly and unacceptable escalation in a series of brutal attacks on displaced people and help workers,” she added in a statement.
The U.S. state department also said that “deeply alarmed reports on RSF attacks on Zamzam and Abu Shouk”, adding: “We condemn RSF attacks on the most vulnerable civilians.”
British Foreign Minister David Lammy, who hosted the Sudan Conference on Tuesday, described the reports of “Indislective RSF attacks” as “shocking”.
The organization of the Assistance of International said that nine of its workers “mercilessly killed, including doctors, guidelines and team leaders” in attack on Zam.
A charitable organization, which announced that the last provider of critical health services in the camp, cited RSF fighters.
“We understand that it was a targeted attack on all health infrastructure in the region to prevent access to health care for internally displaced people.
“We horrified that one of our clinics was also part of this attack – together with other health facilities in El-Fasher.”
Kashif Shafique, the beneficent director of Sudan, told the BBC newshoor program that what happened was not accidental.
Transmissions described by two survivors of female staff members, said RSF fighters entered the safety bunker and recorded nine victims in the head and chest.
In the statement published on Saturday, RSF said that he was not responsible for civilians attacks and that the scenes of murder in Heard is insecrated to discredit his forces.
The next day, the group said that she completed the “successful exemption of the camp from the Sudan Army. The RSF accused the army to use Zamzam as” military barracks and innocent civilians as human protectors. “
Satellite image assessment, a team of experts in the Yale University in the USA said “this attack conservatively represents the most significant attack on Zamzama … Since the struggles have been extradited in the area of EL-relief in the spring 2024”.
Yale School About humanitarian research research research announced that she noticed that “Arson attacks burned multiple structures and significant areas of the camp in the center, southeast and southeastern portions of the camp”.
War – strength of strength between the army and the RSF – created the world’s largest humanitarian crisis, forcing more than 12 million people from their homes and pushing communities in hunger.
15. April 2023. year, after the leaders of the army and RSF fell due to the political future of the country.
El-Fasher is the last capital in Darfur under the armies, and in the RSF is under siege in a year.

More BBC tells the Sudan:
Getty Images / BBC2025-04-14 08:10:00
				



