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Capture of Darfur city by Sudan’s paramilitary forces could cement country’s split | CBC News

    A Sudanese paramilitary force is battling the last pockets of resistance in El Fasher, a Darfur city that has endured a brutal 18-month siege and where a full takeover would entrench a geographical division of the country between rival military factions.

    The advance by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has also raised fears of reprisals against the estimated 250,000 people remaining in El Fasher — the final holdout of the Sudanese army in the western Darfur region — and of an escalation of fighting elsewhere in Sudan.

    Since Sunday, when the RSF said it had captured the army’s headquarters in El Fasher, the paramilitary’s fighters have been detaining fleeing civilians in nearby towns and villages, witnesses and humanitarian and military sources said. Some 26,000 people had been displaced by the fighting, according to the International Organization for Migration.

    Two Sudanese military sources said on Monday that thousands of soldiers from the army and allied former rebel groups were surrounded by RSF fighters after retreating into neighbourhoods in western El Fasher.

    Tom Fletcher, the UN’s emergency relief co-ordinator, said he was “deeply alarmed” by reports of civilian casualties and forced displacement from El Fasher.

    “With fighters pushing further into the city and escape routes cut off, hundreds of thousands of civilians are trapped and terrified — shelled, starving and without access to food, health care or safety,” he said in a news release on Sunday, calling for an “immediate ceasefire” throughout the region.

    Fletcher said the UN has life-saving supplies ready, but due to the intensified attacks in the region, it has made it impossible for workers to get aid in.

    “Safe, rapid and unimpeded humanitarian access must be allowed to reach all civilians in need,” he said.

    Dangerous consequences, expert warns

    Darfur, the RSF’s stronghold, is home to a parallel government it created, and RSF sources say it is also the current base for top RSF leaders, including Gen. Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, widely known as Hemedti.

    “The RSF’s full control of the Darfur region could have dangerous and worrying consequences in the future in terms of partition,” Massad Boulos, U.S. senior adviser for Arab and African affairs, told Al Jazeera Mubasher.

    He compared that prospect to Libya, where competing governments linked to military factions based in the east and west created a de facto geographical split.

    The RSF, which has been locked in a civil war with the army for more than two-and-a-half years, could also use the momentum to try to regain ground elsewhere in Sudan, analysts said.

    WATCH | Human rights officials speak about the conditions in El Fasher last month:

    Reality on the ground in Sudan’s El Fasher is ‘horrific,’ human rights office says

    Human rights organizations are sounding the alarm after a drone attack on a mosque killed at least 70 people in the besieged city of El Fasher in Sudan’s North Darfur region, according to aid workers and the Sudanese army.

    Unless the latest push for U.S.-brokered peace talks makes progress where past attempts have stalled, that could worsen a conflict which has already caused famine, triggered waves of ethnically driven violence and displaced millions of people.

    The army was able to oust the RSF from the Sudanese capital Khartoum earlier this year, but the paramilitaries have amassed advanced weaponry, including long-range drones, that could allow them to attempt a comeback, one military and one RSF source said.

    United Nations chief António Guterres said foreign provision of weapons and increasing external interference in the war were undermining the chances of a political solution. The army accuses the United Arab Emirates of providing military support to the RSF, which the UAE denies.

    “We haven’t seen a sign that RSF leadership is content with just western Sudan,” said Alan Boswell of Crisis Group. “So as long as they are receiving enough supplies to continue a war effort, they still look like they are continuing to escalate this war.”

    The RSF made gains over the weekend in the strategic city of Bara, North Kordofan, which puts it within hours of Khartoum.

    “Our liberation of [El Fasher] is the liberation of Sudan, all the way to Port Sudan…. We are coming and we are coming heavy,” said RSF second-in-command Abdelrahim Dagalo, speaking in a video dated Sunday released by the forces from the army’s El Fasher base.

    “The new Sudan goes forward, the old Sudan gets destroyed,” one soldier can be heard chanting, a key slogan for the RSF-led authority.

    In a statement on Monday, the RSF said it would protect civilians in El Fasher and that humanitarian preparations were being made.

    Civilians rounded up

    Two military sources and two humanitarian sources said the RSF appeared to be directing fleeing civilians to towns around El Fasher where it aimed to set up displacement camps.

    Eyewitnesses who arrived in Tawila — a town to the east controlled by a neutral force that has absorbed hundreds of thousands of fleeing civilians — told Reuters they had been directed to the nearby town of Garney on foot, and that hundreds of people, including women and children, remained in RSF custody there.

    WATCH | Some 7.7 million people facing malnutrition:

    South Sudan faces 2nd-worst hunger crisis in the world

    South Sudan is facing one of the world’s most severe hunger crises — second only to Gaza. As 7.7 million people face malnutrition, according to the World Food Program, aid workers say U.S. funding cuts have taken away the backbone of the country’s health system.

    Activists have long warned of revenge attacks on civilians from the Zaghawa tribe after the intense fight for the city, as happened in the Zamzam displacement camp to the south.

    RSF officials released videos on Sunday saying they were providing safe passage for former fighters, though other videos posted by activists but not verified by Reuters appeared to show RSF fighters shooting unarmed men and cheering around dead bodies.

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