The Guardian Weekly

Sudan Civilians pay a high price for fighting

Research by doctors’ group and relatives’ accounts shed light on suffering and casualties over several weeks of conflict

By Zeinab Mohammed Salih KHARTOUM

Hundreds of civilians have been killed and thousands injured in several weeks of fighting in Sudan between the armed forces and the Rapid Support Forces. The Sudanese American Physicians Association (Sapa) recorded at least 828 civilian deaths and 3,688 injuries between 15 April and 23 May, though the true number of casualties is thought to be much higher.

The Sapa research demonstrates the geographical spread of the violence, and the price paid by civilians. Ceasefires have been in place on most days since fighting broke out, but they have routinely been broken by both sides. More than 330 deaths and 2,300 injuries were recorded on days that were at least partially covered by ceasefires.

Mohammed Salah

Salah, a medical student at the Sudan University of Science and Technology, died in Khartoum on 15 April, the first day of hostilities, after being hit three times by sniper fire. The 21-yearold’s day had started with the short

drive from his home to Khartoum international airport, where the mother of one of his classmates had become stranded. On arrival, a second person asked for a lift.

He drove his passengers, both of whom lived in neighbouring Omdurman, back to his house. The woman was happy to stay at Salah’s house, but the man said he wanted to go home, so Salah set out again in his car.

On every approach he made to the various bridges over the White Nile that link Khartoum to its twin city of Omdurman he found intense fighting between the army and the RSF. Eventually, he gave up and headed home, only to find himself caught in a battle between army soldiers on the ground and RSF snipers positioned on the top of buildings around the main campus of his university.

Within a few minutes, Salah and both his passengers had been killed. Raging fighting meant it took 15 hours for the family to retrieve his body.

“Mohammed loved doing good things,” his older brother Mustafa said, explaining why his brother had agreed to undertake the dangerous, night-time drive.

Suhair Abdallah el-Basher

Basher, a lawyer, was killed along with two of her relatives on 25 April after a shell exploded as she left her house in Khartoum to get in a car that was due to take her to a safer neighbourhood.

The 67-year-old had been stranded in the house near the presidential palace with her two brothers-in-law and her eldest child for 10 days. They had no electricity, and food and water were starting to run out.

On 25 April, it appeared that one of the many ceasefires agreed by Sudan’s warring parties was finally holding. The street outside the house was calm and empty of fighters for the first time since the conflict began.

Another of Basher’s daughters arrived to drive them to a safer neighbourhood. The eldest child, Hiba elRayeh, made it into her sister’s car, but as the older relatives walked the couple of yards between the front door and car door a shell exploded.

Rayeh said she lost consciousness, and when she came to she saw her mother and uncles lying on the road, badly injured but still alive. “I started screaming, ‘We are civilians, we are civilians, please don’t hit us,’” she said.

RSF fighters put Rayeh’s mother and uncles into the back of a pickup truck. Rayeh and her sister followed for two hours as it drove around the city trying to find a hospital. By the time they found one, all three had died.

‘His body remained under a tree in front of my house for a day and a half’

Zakria Abdallah

Abdallah died last week in Geneina, a city in west Darfur, during an attack on his neighbourhood by RSF fighters.

Jalal, a friend of the 41-year-old who did not want to give his full name, said Abdallah and five other men were killed as they tried to flee from the RSF.

“My friend’s body remained under a tree in front of my house for a day and a half,” said Jalal by phone from Chad, to where he has fled. “We could not recover him because of the intense fighting on the streets.”

The 33-year-old, who used to work with an NGO, said he had witnessed appalling scenes before managing to escape across the border. “The streets were filled with bodies,” he said.

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