Civilian deaths – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Mon, 11 May 2026 12:31:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Civilian deaths – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Sudan drone strikes killed at least 880 civilians between January and April: UN https://artifex.news/article70965288-ece/ Mon, 11 May 2026 12:31:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70965288-ece/ Read More “Sudan drone strikes killed at least 880 civilians between January and April: UN” »

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U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights (UNHCR) Volker Turk
| Photo Credit: AP

At least 880 civilians were killed in drone strikes in Sudan between January and April this year, the UN rights office said on Monday (May 11, 2026), warning such strikes were pushing the conflict towards a “new, even deadlier phase”.

Drone attacks by both Sudan’s Army and Paramilitary group Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which have been at war since April 2023, have intensified across the country in recent months.

“Armed drones have now become by far and away the leading cause of civilian deaths,” UN rights chief Volker Turk said in the statement.

A growing use of drones allows fighting to continue “unabated” in the rainy season, which in the past has seen a lull, he said.

“An intensification of hostilities in the coming weeks risks hostilities expanding even further to central and eastern states, with lethal consequences for civilians across enormous areas,” he said.

More than three years of civil war in Sudan have already killed tens of thousands, displaced over 11 million and thrust several areas into famine.

But now, Mr. Turk warned that “unless action is taken without delay, this conflict is on the cusp of entering yet another new, even deadlier phase”.

Most of the civilian deaths attributed to drone strikes in the first three months of the year were recorded in the Kordofan region and Darfur.

Those strikes have continued, with most recently on May 8, 2026, drones striking Al Quoz in South Kordofan and near El-Obeid in North Kordofan, reportedly killing 26 civilians and injuring others, the rights office said.

It said belligerents had used drones to repeatedly strike civilian objects and infrastructure, “diminishing access to sufficient food, clean water and health care”.

Markets have been repeatedly targeted, with at least 28 such attacks resulting in civilian casualties in the first four months of the year. Health facilities have been hit at least 12 times, it added.

Now, the rights office said, drone strikes by the RSF and the Sudanese Army were increasingly spreading beyond Kordofan and Darfur, to Blue Nile, White Nile and Khartoum.

Mr. Turk warned that heightened violence would disrupt provision of critical humanitarian assistance.

“Much of the country, including Kordofan, is now facing an increased risk of famine and acute food insecurity,” he said, adding that the situation was being exacerbated by fertiliser shortages linked to the West Asia war.



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An Ice-cream Truck Packed With Corpses As Gaza Is Pounded By Israel https://artifex.news/an-ice-cream-truck-packed-with-corpses-as-gaza-is-pounded-by-israel-4488468/ Tue, 17 Oct 2023 08:13:25 +0000 https://artifex.news/an-ice-cream-truck-packed-with-corpses-as-gaza-is-pounded-by-israel-4488468/ Read More “An Ice-cream Truck Packed With Corpses As Gaza Is Pounded By Israel” »

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Israel has been pounding Gaza targets for days.

Palestinian Territories:

As Gaza’s hospital morgues overflow with victims killed in Israel’s bombardment triggered by a deadly Hamas attack, even an ice-cream truck has been used to hold corpses before their burial.

Israel has been pounding Gaza targets for days, seeking to wipe out the enclave’s rulers, Hamas, after its militants broke through the militarized border barrier on October 7 to kill more than 1,400 people in southern Israel.

Israel’s air strikes have claimed at least 2,750 lives in Gaza, where mortuaries with capacity only for dozens are filling up more quickly than relatives can claim them.

At the carpark of the hospital in central Gaza’s Deir el-Balah, a white truck covered with posters of ice-cream sticks is now packed with corpses wrapped in white body bags.

Among them are multiple members of Talaat Abu Lashine’s family.

“Two shells fell on the house at dawn. Sixteen people were at home, including eight children who were sleeping peacefully,” he said.

In Gaza City, a little further north, where tens of thousands of inhabitants have heeded Israel’s warning to flee south ahead of an expected ground invasion, many bodies were simply left behind in the mortuaries.

“Given the large number of martyrs lying unclaimed in the morgue of al-Shifa hospital, the deterioration of the corpses, and the continued arrival” of dozens more, “a common grave has been prepared to bury around 100” of them, said Salama Maruf, head of the media bureau for the Hamas government that runs Gaza.

‘Lots of children’

Even body bags are now in short supply, said Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA).

“Every story coming out of Gaza is about survival, despair, and loss,” he said.

“Sometimes we don’t even have time to write the names” of the dead because there are just too many of them, said Ihsan al-Natour, who works at a cemetery in southern Gaza’s Rafah.

“There are lots of children among the martyrs,” he said, adding that “we are burying three or four in each grave.”

Gaza’s ministry of religious affairs has recommended using common graves because of the large numbers of deaths and a shortage of burial space, as Muslim funeral rites also require burials to take place as quickly as possible.

Hamas, which has controlled the enclave since 2007, said Monday that 1,000 bodies could still be under rubble and warned of diseases spreading.

In Rafah, residents prepared new graves, placing bricks and tiles around mounds of freshly dug earth.

In one of them, three bodies of children were stacked on top of each other. There wasn’t enough space to lay them to rest separately.

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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