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More than 120, mostly civilians, killed in two days in Sudan bombardments
FRANCE 24 English
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9 months ago
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00:00
Next, we turn to Sudan. At least 127 people, mostly civilians, were killed there over the
00:05
past 24 hours, excuse me, 48 hours, by barrel bombs and shelling from the warring sides.
00:12
This news comes from rights activists observing the civil war that began on April 15, 2022.
00:18
The conflict between the state army and the paramilitary rapid support forces has been
00:22
turning increasingly bloody as ceasefire efforts have stalled and crises elsewhere have dominated
00:27
world attention.
00:31
These ruins are all that are left of this bus after it was hit by a shell on Tuesday.
00:36
Fourteen passengers died as well as several passers-by in an army-controlled sector of
00:41
Omdurman near Khartoum, Sudan's capital. The governor of Khartoum denounced it as an act
00:48
of terrorism perpetrated by the rapid support forces.
00:56
This attack, instead of being directed at our heroes on the front lines, is aimed at
01:01
these innocent civilians in their everyday lives, whether on public transportation or
01:06
in markets.
01:13
This attack is widely seen as a reprisal for airstrikes carried out by the Sudanese army
01:18
in the north Darfur town of Kap Kabir. More than eight barrel bombs hit the market, killing
01:23
at least 127 people. The army has frequently targeted towns in north Darfur as it fights
01:30
the RSF for control of the state capital, Al-Fashir. In a statement released on X, the
01:36
army denied any responsibility.
01:38
Some political parties affiliated with the terrorist Daglu militia have been spreading
01:42
lies after every strike targeting rebel activity sites carried out by our forces. The armed
01:47
forces affirm its continuation of exercising its legitimate right to defend the country.
01:53
According to the United Nations, 20,000 people have died since the start of the conflict
01:58
in April 2023, but the real death toll could be much higher, as parties have been accused
02:04
of using famine as a strategic tool of war.
02:07
On Wednesday, Sudan topped the emergency watch list published by the International Rescue
02:12
Committee. The report found that Sudan had become the biggest humanitarian crisis ever
02:16
recorded, where 30.4 million people are in dire need of humanitarian aid.
02:46
It's one of the worst crises that we've seen in the 21st century, as the report noted.
02:58
You have 30 million people that are in need of humanitarian aid, 26 million people that
03:04
are facing acute hunger, that are facing near-famine-like conditions. 11 million people have had to flee
03:11
their homes, and about 10,000 people are leaving every day. Some people are staying
03:17
within Sudan's borders, but many are fleeing to South Sudan, which is already a very unstable
03:23
and deeply impoverished state, and similar conditions facing refugees that leave and
03:29
flee for Chad. That also then creates refugee crises and instability and very precarious
03:37
situations for those refugees living in both Chad and South Sudan. So this is completely
03:44
spiralled out of control at this point, and it would require a lot more international
03:48
attention to stem the acute crisis that they're facing.
03:53
I'm sorry about that, Nash. I'll try not to interrupt you, because what you're saying
03:55
is extremely interesting. What I wanted to say was that the situation is awful, as you
04:01
just described it, and it is deeply, deeply disturbing that so many people are affected.
04:06
But it's worth pointing out to people watching that this is actually sort of building on
04:10
other similar situations that Sudan has lived through. We're reporting about the barrel
04:16
bombing in Darfur, but it's within, obviously, everybody's living memory that just back in
04:22
2003, there was a massive, massive war in Darfur. Over 200,000 people were killed.
04:28
Exactly. So Sudan hasn't really enjoyed much stability. There's always been some sort of
04:34
conflict that it's faced. And part of the problem was that Sudan has always faced dictatorship,
04:41
whether it be very personalistic styles of dictators, most notably the recent dictatorship
04:47
of Omar Bashir, who was ousted in 2019, of course. But he purposely armed different groups.
04:53
And so there were many different militias that he armed in order to offset one another
04:58
so that they wouldn't really challenge him directly. And he used them for his own purpose
05:03
In many events, in many instances, they were being used to engage in what some would call
05:10
genocide against his own people. So there's been a history of conflict. There's been a
05:15
history of militias. And there hasn't really been much experience with stability and some
05:21
sort of power-sharing arrangement, which is why it failed so spectacularly when they tried
05:29
to come up with a power-sharing arrangement after Bashir was ousted.
05:33
Indeed. Omar al-Bashir ousted in 2019. General al-Burhan and Hemedi Dagalo were, of course,
05:42
the two who tried to share power. They can't get on and do that. In a nutshell, can you
05:48
describe to us what the issue is between these two groups? Why can't they work together?
05:54
So it has just to do with a personal rivalry. They have been part of the top elites in Bashir's
06:03
government, and they were sort of jockeying for power when Bashir was president of Sudan.
06:12
And neither leader is satisfied with having the other one holding power. So the rapid
06:21
support forces, which are being led by Mohammed Dagalo, who goes by Hemedi, they're trying
06:29
to integrate those rapid support forces into the regular Sudanese military. But if they
06:35
do so, Hemedi fears that he would lose and the militia that he runs would lose power.
06:42
And they don't want to agree to that. So essentially, they're refusing to give up the power that
06:47
they have, seeing that one of them wants to be on top. And unfortunately, that's not the
06:52
way it works. And once again, the shadow of history is still there because the rapid support
06:57
forces are the current day successors of the infamous Janjabi militia from Darfur.
07:01
Exactly. So that is their history there, that they have, I mean, they've engaged in all kinds
07:09
of atrocities. And historically, these types of groups, I mean, it's a very complex group,
07:16
the rapid support forces. It's made of many different tribal militias and warlords that
07:22
are used to having control over their own little bits of territory and are struggling
07:27
really to integrate themselves and are possibly concerned about facing any kind of transitional
07:34
justice for all the atrocities that they had committed in the past.
07:38
Natasha Lindstedt, thank you very much for giving us this context, which is vital to
07:42
understand the situation in Sudan, which is, as you pointed out, alarming, to say the very
07:47
least. Natasha Lindstedt, Deputy Dean at the University of Essex, as we heard, a specialist
07:51
with knowledge on all levels of what is happening right now in Sudan. Natasha, thank you very much
07:56
for joining us here on France 24. We appreciate your time. Thanks for having me.
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