Sudan Rapid Support Forces – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sat, 07 Feb 2026 07:42:00 +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 Sudan Rapid Support Forces – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Drone attack on Sudan aid convoy kills one: UN agency https://artifex.news/article70603228-ece/ Sat, 07 Feb 2026 07:42:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70603228-ece/ Read More “Drone attack on Sudan aid convoy kills one: UN agency” »

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Sacks of crops are stacked at the El Obeid crops market, in El Obeid, North Kordofan State, Sudan. File.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

A drone attack on an aid convoy in Sudan’s North Kordofan state killed one person and wounded several others, the UN’s humanitarian agency said, with local civilian organisations blaming paramilitaries.

The convoy was headed on Friday (February 6, 2026) to an area near El-Obeid, a city under Army control but encircled by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces for a year.

The Army and the RSF have been at war since April 2023, with the conflict killing tens of thousands of people, displacing millions more and triggering one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.

The UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Sudan, Denise Brown, said she came across the aftermath of the strike, including burning aid trucks, after visiting El-Obeid.

She said she was “deeply concerned” by the attack and called for the protection of humanitarian personnel, assets and supplies.

Emergency Lawyers, an independent organisation documenting war crimes in Sudan, also said the convoy, contracted by the World Food Programme, had been attacked, and accused the RSF of carrying out the strike.

Sudan Doctors Network, a local civilian group documenting atrocities, also blamed the RSF. It said three people were wounded in the attack, which it called “a flagrant violation of international humanitarian law and amounts to a full-fledged war crime”.

“It undermines humanitarian efforts to deliver life-saving aid to civilians affected by the war,” it added.

More than 21 million people — nearly half of Sudan’s population — face high levels of acute food insecurity, according to the United Nations.

Fighting in Sudan is now concentrated in the Kordofan region, after the RSF took control of Darfur to the west. El-Obeid lies on the main road linking Darfur with the capital Khartoum.



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Seven dead, 71 wounded as Sudan’s RSF shells besieged city https://artifex.news/article69997428-ece/ Sun, 31 Aug 2025 17:03:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article69997428-ece/ Read More “Seven dead, 71 wounded as Sudan’s RSF shells besieged city” »

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Shelling by Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces killed at least seven people and wounded 71 others in El-Fasher, a medical source said Sunday, as the paramilitary group launched its fiercest offensive yet on the besieged city.

El-Fasher, the last major city in the vast western Darfur region still under army control, has become the most violent front line in the war between the Sudanese army and the RSF, which erupted in April 2023.

In recent weeks, paramilitary forces have escalated their long-running siege, launching fierce artillery barrages and ground incursions into densely populated neighbourhoods, the city’s airport and the famine-hit Abu Shouk displacement camp.

The few hospitals still operational have been repeatedly bombarded and the local police headquarters captured by the RSF.

The medical source, who requested anonymity for safety reasons, said the true toll from Saturday’s attack was “likely higher”, as many injured had been unable to reach the hospital due to the intensity of the RSF’s strikes.

Among the wounded, mostly suffering from shrapnel injuries, 22 were reported to be in a critical condition, according to the source, who was reached via satellite internet to bypass a communications blackout.

Local activists said the attack struck several neighbourhoods in the city’s west near the airport, which RSF forces have sought to capture.

‘Kill box’

The RSF, which evolved from the Janjaweed Arab militias accused of genocide in Darfur in the early 2000s, is seeking to wrest full control of the region from the army after being pushed out of the capital Khartoum earlier this year.

Satellite imagery from Yale University’s Humanitarian Research Lab revealed Thursday that the RSF had constructed more than 31 kilometres of berms — raised earth barriers — “creating a literal kill box” in the city, the report said.

Its imagery also identified munitions impact damage at the city’s water authority, which supplies El-Fasher with fresh drinking water.

Nathaniel Raymond, the lab’s executive director, said the RSF had confined the Sudanese army and its allied militias to less than five square kilometres in the city.

“It’s the smallest it’s been since the siege began,” he told AFP.

The besieged population — estimated by the UN at some 300,000 — has endured severe shortages of water and food for over a year, according to humanitarian workers.

Famine was officially declared in three displacement camps around El-Fasher last year, and the UN warned it could spread to the city itself by last May.

A lack of data has so far prevented an official declaration of famine, but the UN estimates that nearly 40 percent of children under five are acutely malnourished, with 11 percent severely so.

Many have resorted to eating animal fodder, while desperate attempts to escape into the desert often end in death from exposure, starvation or violence.

‘Massacres’

“The pattern of life is ending,” said Raymond.

“They are dying in poverty, crossfire and bombardment and they’re being killed as they’re trying to leave,” he added.

Yale’s satellite images show that cemeteries had been expanded over the past months.

“The most worrisome part will be when there’s no one left to dig the graves anymore.”

The RSF, which recently announced the formation of a parallel government in the region, would control all five Darfur state capitals if it were to successfully capture El-Fasher.

Experts have warned that the city’s non-Arab Zaghawa tribe may face a similar fate to the non-Arab Massalit tribe in West Darfur’s state capital of El-Geneina, where UN experts found up to 15,000 people, mostly from the tribe, were killed in 2023 massacres blamed on RSF forces.

Both warring sides have been accused of war crimes, but the RSF has, in particular, been accused of genocide, sexual violence and systematic looting.

In the early 2000s, the paramilitary force led a government-orchestrated campaign of ethnic cleansing against non-Arab ethnic groups in Darfur, killing an estimated 300,000 people.

“The Janjaweed are about to win the entire genocide that began in the early 21st century,” Raymond said.

“And the world isn’t going to do anything about it.”

Published – August 31, 2025 10:33 pm IST



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Sudan rescuers say 28 killed in shelling of Khartoum fuel station https://artifex.news/article68962750-ece/ Sun, 08 Dec 2024 16:31:19 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68962750-ece/ Read More “Sudan rescuers say 28 killed in shelling of Khartoum fuel station” »

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The Sudanese army, which has been fighting the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) since April 2023, has been advancing towards the capital in recent weeks, in a bid to regain control of Khartoum. File.
| Photo Credit: AFP

A Sudanese network of volunteer rescuers said that 28 civilians were killed Sunday when a fuel station in an area of Khartoum under paramilitary control came under shelling.

The Sudanese Army, which has been fighting the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) since April 2023, has been advancing towards the capital in recent weeks, in a bid to regain control of Khartoum.

On Sunday, a fuel station in RSF-held southern Khartoum was hit by shelling, said the South Belt Emergency Response Room.

The youth-led volunteer group said “28 people were confirmed dead” and “the number of injured reached 37, including 29 burns cases” and some shrapnel injuries.

Early in the war, which has pitted Army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan against the forces of his former deputy, RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, the paramilitaries had largely pushed the army out of Khartoum.

The government, loyal to Burhan, is based in Port Sudan on the Red Sea coast, where the army has retained control.

The war has killed tens of thousands of civilians and displaced over 11 million, creating what the United Nations has described as the world’s largest displacement crisis.

In late November, the Sudanese army said it had retaken the Sennar state capital, Sinja, south of Khartoum, five months after paramilitaries had seized it.

Sinja is a strategic area as it lies on a key road linking army-controlled areas of eastern and central Sudan.

The RSF meanwhile has taken control of nearly all of the vast western region of Darfur, rampaged through the agricultural heartland of central Sudan and pushed into the army-controlled southeast.



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