Fighting pitted the Sudanese army against a powerful paramilitary force for the second day in a row on Sunday, amid a power struggle between the two generals in command of Sudan since the 2021 putsch, killing at least 56 civilians in 24 hours and three UN humanitarian workers.
According to witnesses, heavy weapons fighting raged on Sunday in the northern suburbs of Khartoum, as well as in the south of the capital, between the regular army and the paramilitaries of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), of ex-militiamen from the war in the Darfur region.
The army and the FSR announced to open at 2:00 p.m. local time and for three hours “humanitarian corridors” to evacuate the wounded, keeping on both sides a “right of response in the event of violation” of the agreement.
Since Saturday, air raids shaking buildings, artillery fire, street battles with automatic rifles or heavy machine guns have left no respite for the inhabitants of Khartoum deprived of water and electricity. The fighting is concentrated in the capital and in Darfur, in the west of the country.
A network of pro-democracy doctors has identified 56 civilians as well as “dozens” of fighters killed, and more than 600 people injured.
The UN’s World Food Program (WFP) has suspended aid to Sudan after three of its staff were killed in fighting in Darfur.
In Khartoum, bathed in the smell of gunpowder, street fighting and armored vehicles across the roads prevent any movement. Many armed men in fatigues roam the streets, as well as a few civilians carrying their belongings in search of shelter.
In the city center where the political and military institutions sit, rise columns of thick black smoke.
“It’s very worrying, it doesn’t look like it’s going to calm down quickly,” said Ahmed Seif, who lives with his wife and three children in eastern Khartoum.
He fears that his building has been hit by gunfire, but says he is “afraid to go out to check”, for fear of stray bullets and men in fatigues who criss-cross the streets.
In Khartoum, the night was long. “The explosions and shootings have not stopped,” said Ahmed Hamid, a resident of the northern suburbs.
Witnesses also reported artillery fire in Kassala, in the east of the country.
Latent tensions
The conflict had been simmering for weeks, preventing any political settlement in one of the poorest countries in the world. Since the popular revolt that overthrew Omar al-Bashir in 2019, Sudan has been trying to organize its first free elections after 30 years of dictatorship.
During the putsch that ended the democratic transition in October 2021, the head of the army, Abdel Fattah al-Burhane, and the boss of the FSR, General Mohamed Hamdane Daglo, known as “Hemedti”, had joined forces to oust civilians in power.
But the rivalry between the two generals, latent for weeks, degenerated into violence on Saturday.
The international community has since multiplied calls for a ceasefire. The latest came from Beijing as Pope Francis urged to “pray for arms to be abandoned”. The Arab League and the African Union met urgently.
Chad, bordering Darfur, has closed its border.
In Cairo, the Arab countries agreed to condemn the violence and call for a “political solution”.
Who is holding what?
It was impossible on Sunday to know which force controlled what. The FSR announced that they had taken the airport on Saturday, but the army denied it.
The FSR also said to hold the presidential palace. The army has denied and above all claims to hold the HQ of its staff, one of the main power complexes in Khartoum.
As for television, the two parties also claim to have taken it. In the surroundings, residents report continuous fighting while on the air, only patriotic songs are broadcast, as during the putsch.
Because the open war between the generals is also media: Saturday, Hemedti chained the interviews to the television channels of the Gulf, of which several States are its allies, multiplying the insults against General Burhane, remained invisible so far.
Hemedti has continued to demand the departure of “Burhane the criminal”, while the army published on Facebook a “wanted notice” against Hemedti, “criminal on the run”.
UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres called on the two men to demand “an immediate end to the violence”. He urged the Egyptian President, Abdel Fattah al-Sissi, a big influential neighbor, to act when since Saturday Cairo has been worried about a video showing several of its soldiers apparently in the hands of RSF men.