According to a network of lawyers, Sudanese paramilitary groups killed more than 200 people in a three-day assault south of Khartoum, but the Army Support Government has more than doubled the death toll.
An emergency lawyer network that recorded human rights violations during a 22-month battle between rival security forces injured or went on hundreds more after they fired fire on villagers as they tried to cross the white Nile River He said he was unknown and drowned for fear.
The Army Support Government's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said 433 people, including children, were killed in attacks by the Paramilitary, rapid support forces (RSF).
The attack on the villages of the White Nile State of Arcadalis and Alkerwatt, 100 km (60 miles) south of the capital, thousands of people escaped, witnesses said.
A spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the world's bodies received “terrifying reports that dozens of women have been raped and hundreds of families have been forced to flee.”
For three days, the RSF fighter jets had been exposed to “execution, trickery, forced, looting and looting” by unarmed civilians.
Since the outbreak of war in April 2023, the Army and paramilitary groups have been accused of war crimes.
The RSF was also accused of genocide as it was allegedly targeting non-Arab minorities in the Darfur region of Western Sudan, as it was targeting summary executions and systemic sexual violence. It's there.
The war killed tens of thousands of people, uprooted more than 12 million people, creating what the International Rescue Committee calls “the biggest humanitarian crisis ever recorded.”
The White Nile rule, which extends from just south of Khartoum to the border with South Sudan, is divided by fighting political parties.
The Army controls the South, including the state's capital, Labak, two major cities and a major military base. The RSF holds the northern part of the state, including the village where the latest attacks were taken.
Medical sources said it is almost impossible to check the toll.
“Some bodies are still lying on the streets, some have been killed in the house and no one can reach them,” the source said, demanding anonymity for safety reasons.
Fighting has intensified across Sudan in recent weeks as the Army seeks to regain full control of the capital from paramilitary organizations.
On Tuesday, emergency lawyers denounced the troops for “wild” attacks on civilians in East Khartoum just days after military opponents killed six civilians in the area.
The network said civilians in the East Nile district, accused of working with the RSF, were subject to “kills, forced disappearances, arbitrary arrests” by individuals associated with the Army.
UN children said Khartoum children were trapped in “living nightmares” of indiscriminate shootings, looting and forced evacuation.
UNICEF also said it had received surprising reports of children being accused and families being separated, with the exposure of sexual violence.
The UN Human Rights Office said the “established immunity” promoted a massive amount of human rights abuses across Sudan.
“Continuous and discreet attacks” against civilians, such as “simply executes, sexual violence, and other violations and abuses highlight the complete failure to respect international humanitarian law,” said in a statement Tuesday. .
The United Nations also called for an expanded jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court and a long-standing arms embargo to cover everything in Sudan, not just Darfur.
The vast western region, home to about a quarter of Sudan's population, has intensified violence in recent weeks as RSF seeks to consolidate its holds. Paramilitary groups have stepped up their attacks on Elfasher, the capital of North Darfur, Darfur's only major city.





