Sudan in Crisis: Harrowing Village Siege Sparks Outrage
Sudan's army pledges a harsh response to a deadly attack by the Rapid Support Forces on a village, killing over 100 people. The largest attack amid ongoing RSF assaults, it led to global calls for investigation. The conflict between RSF and Sudanese army escalates, risking regional stability.
Sudan's army said on Thursday it would deliver a "harsh response" to an attack a day earlier on a village by the Sudanese paramilitary Rapid Support Forces that pro-democracy activists said killed more than 100 people.
The attack was the largest in a string of dozens of attacks by RSF soldiers on small villages across the farming state after it took control of the capital Wad Madani in December. Army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan's statement followed accusations by the local activists that the army did not respond to pleas for help on Wednesday.
The army did not reply to a request for comment. The top United Nations official in Sudan on Thursday called for an investigation into the attack in Wad al-Noura village in Gezira State in central Sudan.
"Even by the tragic standards of Sudan's conflict, the images emerging from Wad Al-Noura are heart-breaking," said U.N. Humanitarian Coordinator Clementine Nkweta-Salami in a statement. She cited photos shared on social media by the Wad Madani Resistance Committee, which has been tracking such attacks, showing what it described as dozens of victims wrapped for burial.
The committee said on Thursday that 104 were killed and hundreds injured in Wad al-Noura and that the RSF was moving towards other villages. "Wad al-Noura village ... witnessed a genocide on Wednesday after the RSF attacked twice," the committee said in a statement late on Wednesday.
A telecommunications blackout prevented Reuters from reaching medics or residents to verify the details. The RSF began fighting with the army in April 2023 after disputes over the integration of the two forces, and has since taken over the capital Khartoum and most of western Sudan. It is now seeking to advance into the centre, as United Nations agencies say the people of Sudan are at "imminent risk of famine".
On Thursday, the resistance committee in Karari, an army-controlled area to the north of the capital, blamed the RSF for artillery fire that it said had killed 22. Eyewitnesses said that the fire had come from across the Nile in RSF-controlled Bahri. In a statement on Thursday, the RSF said it had attacked army and allied militia bases around Wad al-Noura, losing eight soldiers, and noted inaccurate reports circulating about the incident.
The Wad Madani Resistance Committee accused the RSF on Wednesday of using heavy artillery against civilians, looting and driving women and children to seek refuge in the nearby town of Managil. "The people of Wad al-Noura called on the army to rescue them, but they shamefully did not respond," the committee said.
The army-aligned Transitional Sovereign Council condemned the attack. "These are criminal acts that reflect the systematic behaviour of these militias in targeting civilians," it said in a statement.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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