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Sudan fighting rages for second day despite UN-proposed ceasefire

Civilians in Sudan have been subjected to a second day of heavy fighting, waking up in the capital, Khartoum, on Sunday to the sound of gunfire and military jets over the city despite a four-hour UN-proposed humanitarian ceasefire between the two main factions of the ruling military regime.

The violence that broke out on Saturday between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and left at least 56 civilians in the capital dead spread to other parts of the country, with the UN’s World Food Programme suspending operations in the country after three of its employees were killed in clashes in Darfur. Fighting was also reported in the eastern border state of Kassala.

It was the first such outbreak since both joined forces to oust the veteran Islamist autocrat Omar al-Bashir in 2019 and was sparked by a disagreement over the integration of the RSF into the military as part of a transition towards civilian rule to end the political-economic crisis sparked by a military coup in 2021.

The US, China, Russia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UN security council, European Union and African Union have appealed for a quick end to the hostilities that threaten to worsen instability in an already volatile wider region.

Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the head of Sudan’s transitional governing sovereign council, and Gen Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, known as Hemedti, the head of paramilitary RSF, agreed to a three-hour humanitarian pause from 4pm to 7pm local time but while firing initially subsided gunfire could still be heard and plumes of smoke seen in the background of live broadcasts from the capital.

Heavy fighting was reported round the Khartoum international airport and the military headquarters. Witnesses said the army had carried out airstrikes on RSF barracks and bases, including in Omdurman across the Nile River from Khartoum, and managed to destroy most of their facilities.

In Nyala, the capital of South Darfur and Sudan’s most populous city after Khartoum, residents told of being forced to flee by the fighting between the two rival factions.

Selma Ahmed, from the city’s Khartoum Belail neighbourhood, told the Guardian that her area has been emptied of people. “Nobody has remained here, the fight was heavy, people had to flee and reports of looting by armed forces, they love taking cars, even if the car can’t move they just with a bigger vehicle,” she said.

“The RSF seized control of the western military basement in Nyala yesterday from the army and today they seized the international airport.”

Monitors say 22 people have been killed in the city, with a further 17 killed in Al Fasher in northern Darfur state. Mona Hussien, a university lecturer, said she had never experienced such a thing in her life.

“Even the attack on Al Fasher airport in 2003 wasn’t like this,” she said of an attack which began the Darfur war 20 years ago.

It is understood that in Al Fasher heavy fighting around the army headquarters quickly spread to the bases of the notorious operational forces of the intelligence agencies in the south-east of the city.

In Khartoum witnesses said the army had also retaken control over much of Khartoum’s presidential palace from the RSF after both sides claimed to hold it and other key installations in Khartoum, where heavy artillery and gun battles raged into Sunday.

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