According to officials, the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces raided a community in Sudan’s Gezira province on Wednesday, resulting in at least 100 fatalities and several injuries.
In the attacks on Wad al-Noura village in Gezira by the Rapid Support Forces, women, children, and the elderly were among the casualties. Mini Arko Minawi, the governor of Darfur province, remarked on X, formerly Twitter.
A grassroots group set up to protect residents in Wad Madani, the capital city of Gezira, said late Wednesday on social media that the paramilitary force, which has been fighting the Sudanese army for over a year, used heavy artillery to besiege and attack the village.
The Madani Resistance Committee, which has been threatened and attacked by the RSF in the past, accused the paramilitaries of looting Wad al-Noura in the midst of the attacks which it said started Wednesday morning.
The RSF claimed in December that it had seized control of Wad Madani, about 100 kilometers (60 miles) southeast of the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, and a haven for hundreds of thousands of people displaced by fighting.
The resistance committee said the RSF invaded the village, displacing residents, including women and children, to other parts of the district of al-Manaqil.
The Sudanese transitional government in a statement on its Telegram channel condemned the attacks and called for the international community to hold the RSF accountable.
“These are criminal acts that reflect the systematic behavior of these (RSF) militias in targeting civilians, plundering their property, and forcibly displacing them from their areas,” said the media office for the Transitional Sovereignty Council, which was set up after the ouster of longtime president Omar al-Bashir in 2019.
The paramilitary group said it attacked three camps west, north and south of Wad-al Noura, clashing with the Sudanese army.
“Our forces will not stand idly by in the face of any movements or gatherings by the enemy and will work to pursue and defeat the enemy,” said the RSF in its statement.
Clementine Nkweta-Salami, the United Nations Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Sudan, said Thursday on X that she was “shocked” by reports of the violent attacks.
“Human tragedy has become a hallmark of life in Sudan. We cannot allow impunity to become another one,” she said.
In a statement, NKweta-Salami said that heavy gunfire and explosive weapons were used in populated areas, citing reports she deems credible.
She called for accountability and an investigation into the attacks.
The country has been destroyed by the conflict between the RSF and the Sudanese army, which has left the populace on the verge of starvation and spread over numerous cities.
Thousands of individuals have been injured and around 14,000 people have died. There are hundreds of thousands of displaced people.
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