PORT SUDAN, Sudan
Paramilitary artillery that struck a mosque and other civilian buildings in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum killed 10 people on Tuesday, local activists said.
It is the latest incident in
which multiple civilians have been killed in the city during nearly six months
of war between Sudan’s army chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and his former deputy,
Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitary commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo.
A local resistance committee
said “10 civilians were killed and 11 wounded in artillery shelling by the
Rapid Support Forces in Al-Samrab neighborhood,” across the Blue Nile River to
the north of central Khartoum.
The committee is one of many
groups that used to organize pro-democracy protests and now provide assistance
during the war.
“Some shells fell on a mosque,
a health center, and citizens’ homes,” the committee said by telephone to AFP
in the eastern city of Port Sudan.
On September 12 a medical source told AFP that “17 civilians were killed” by
paramilitaries in northern Khartoum, where witnesses reported RSF shelling.
Those deaths came two days
after at least 51 people were killed and dozens wounded in air strikes on a
southern Khartoum market, according to United Nations human rights chief Volker
Turk.
The worst of the violence has
been concentrated in Khartoum and the western region of Darfur, but North
Kordofan — a crossroads between the capital and Darfur — has also seen
fighting.
Nearly 7,500 people have been
killed in Sudan since the conflict broke out on April 15, according to a
conservative estimate from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data
project.
Battles have displaced almost
4.3 million people within Sudan, in addition to around 1.2 million more who
have fled across borders, UN figures show.
No comments:
Post a Comment