At least 32 civilians killed in Sudan army attacks: Activists
Head of Sudan’s army officially dissolves Rapid Support Forces, who he has been fighting since April.
At least 32 civilians have been killed and dozens injured in artillery attacks by the Sudanese army, one of the highest tolls from a single day of fighting since war broke out in April, the activist group Emergency Lawyers said.
The shelling on Tuesday took place in the Ombada neighbourhood in western Omdurman, the statement released on Wednesday said, a neighbourhood that has seen several deadly attacks.
Rights activists and residents said that the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) that are fighting for control of the country have fired missiles into populated areas, incurring hundreds of civilian casualties in the capital Khartoum and other cities.
While the RSF holds most of the ground in Khartoum and the cities of Omdurman and Khartoum North that make up the wider capital, the army has the edge in heavier artillery and aircraft.
Late on Wednesday, Sudan’s military ruler, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, issued a constitutional decree ordering the dissolution of the RSF, the governing sovereign council said. There was no immediate reaction from the RSF.
Earlier this week, military sources said the army had deployed large numbers of ground troops in Omdurman and was preparing for a large operation to attempt to cut off the RSF’s main supply route into the capital from the Darfur region.
Local volunteers reported that 19 people had been killed in army raids on Ombada on Sunday. Residents said large numbers fled the Ombada neighbourhood on Wednesday.
Activists and residents have also accused the RSF of damaging homes by firing anti-aircraft missiles and artillery, as well as looting and occupying civilian neighbourhoods.
“The use of heavy and light artillery in areas packed with civilians is a war crime … and reflects a disregard for their lives,” the Emergency Lawyers, who are pro-democracy legal activists, said on Wednesday.
They said the army and RSF would be brought to justice.
The factions, which fell out over internationally backed plans to integrate their forces during a transition to democracy, have denied responsibility for attacks that have killed civilians.
The United States on Wednesday sanctioned the deputy head of the RSF for involvement in human rights abuses by his troops, and had previously sanctioned companies linked to both sides.