At least 33 people died in RSF attacks in Sudan | Sudan War News

Paramilitary forces have been accused of attacks on El-Obeid's prison and displaced camps in Darfur.

At least 33 people in Sudan have been killed in Sudan, allegedly being carried out by the Paramilitary Rapid Support Force (RSF) as the brutal two-year war claims its latest victim.

Local sources said an RSF strike was held in El-Obeid's prison on Saturday, killing at least 19 people, while at least 14 members of the same family were killed in an air strike in Darfur on Friday night.

The attack is part of the ongoing war between the RSF and the military-led Sudan Armed Forces (SAF), which has been followed by six consecutive days in a wartime drone attack by the paramilitary group on the Army-led government of the Port of Sudan during the war.

These attacks damaged critical infrastructure, including the power grid and the country’s last action civil airport, a key portal for providing assistance to war-revelling countries.

The war killed tens of thousands of people, displaced, and triggered what the United Nations calls the worst humanitarian crisis in the world.

A medical source told AFP that the attack on the prison on Saturday also injured 45 people. Sources say prisons in the army-controlled city of the North Codofan capital were attacked by RSF drones.

A rescue group said the night before, he was killed in the displacement camp of Abu Shuk near El-Fasher in Darfur, blamed the paramilitary for blame.

The volunteer aid team said the camp was “a target of rapid support for the fierce bombing of the troops”.

According to the United Nations, the camp near El-Fasher is the last national capital of Darfur and remains uncontrolled by the RSF.

It is home to thousands of people's continuous violence in Darfur and the conflict that has been in Africa's third largest country since 2023.

RSF has bombarded the camps several times in recent weeks.

Abu Shouk is located near Zamzam Camp and the RSF occupied it in April after the devastating offensive actually cleared.

RSF upgrade

Elsewhere on Saturday, SAF fighter jets attacked RSF positions in the Darfur cities of Nyala and El-Geneina, destroying weapons warehouses and military equipment, a military source told AFP.

The RSF recently said it has brought the strategic town of Al-Nahud to West Kordofan, the main army supply line in Darfur.

Earlier this month, the RSF's escalation in the Port of Sudan came after the military attacked the Nyala airport in South Darfur, where the RSF received foreign military assistance, including drones. Local media said dozens of RSF officials were killed during the attack.

Sudan's military unanimous authorities accused the United Arab Emirates of supplying the drones to the RSF without the air force.

The war began with a power struggle between SAF Chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and his former deputy RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo. It effectively divided the entire country into two, with the army controlling the north, east and center, while the RSF and its allies ruled almost Darfur in the western and southern regions.

Both sides were charged with war crimes.