KHARTOUM, Sudan
Sudan's military leader, Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, has visited the presidential palace in Khartoum, after landing at the city's international airport, just hours after it was recaptured by the army.
Surrounded by cheering
soldiers at the venue - a significant symbol of absolute power and sovereignty
- Burhan declared the capital "free" of the paramilitary Rapid
Support Forces.
"Khartoum is free, it's
done," he said.
This is believed to be the
first time Burhan has set foot in the presidential palace since the start of
the war almost two years ago.
The military-led government
was forced to move to Port Sudan on the Red Sea after the RSF seized control of
the capital early in the war.
Earlier, an army commander
told the BBC that his troops had fully secured the airport and expected to be
able to clear the rest of the RSF fighters by the end of day.
The army has been moving
swiftly since recapturing the presidential palace on Friday and seizing state
institutions taken by the RSF.
The RSF had controlled most of
Khartoum since the war began in April 2023. Nationwide, hundreds of thousands
have been killed, and millions have been forced to flee their homes.
A army spokesperson also said
that troops had recaptured all the bridges over the River Nile that connect the
three cities which make up Greater Khartoum, along with a military camp in
Jebel Awliya, the group's stronghold in southern Khartoum
Residents have been reporting
this week that RSF fighters were retreating southwards, apparently towards
Jebel Awliya, the only exit route left to them.
Drone footage released by the
army showed people crossing a bridge over the dam there. The BBC wasn't able to
verify who they were, but the military said it was RSF fighters fleeing
Khartoum.
Videos posted on social media
appeared to show some people in central Khartoum celebrating the army's advance
after what many have described as a brutal RSF occupation.
Those unwilling or unable to
leave have consistently reported mass looting by the RSF, whose fighters took
over civilian homes.
Khartoum is one of the areas
of the country the UN said was nearing famine conditions, because of looted
markets and restrictions on aid by both sides.
Rights groups have also
documented sexual violence and other abuses.
Both the RSF and the army have
also been accused of indiscriminately shelling civilian areas.
Earlier this week, the air
force bombed a market and eyewitnesses said dozens of civilians were
killed.
Recapturing Khartoum is an
enormous achievement for the army, which could give it a strategic advantage in
the war.
But the war is far from over.
The RSF still holds almost all
the Darfur region in western Sudan.
Both sides are backed by
foreign powers who have poured weapons into the country, and international
efforts to broker peace have failed.
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