Residents near Sudanese capital ordered to evacuate over fighting

A Chadian cart owner who transports belongings of Sudanese people who fled the conflict in Sudan's Darfur region, pushes his cart while crossing the border between Sudan and Chad in Adre, Chad August 4, 2023. (REUTERS)
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Updated 07 August 2023
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Residents near Sudanese capital ordered to evacuate over fighting

  • The war between the army chief General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and his former deputy, RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, has killed more than 3,900 people, according to a conservative estimate by the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project

WAD MADANI, Sudan: Residents of an area near Sudan’s capital on Monday were ordered to evacuate, locals said, as fighting between the army and paramilitary forces continues to shake the capital.
“Heavy artillery fire” fell on densely populated areas of the Sudanese capital and nearby areas, witnesses told AFP. In adjacent Omdurman, Khartoum’s battle-scarred twin city, shelling fell on residential homes.
The army and paramilitary forces ordered the evacuation of civilians from Abu Rouf, according to the neighborhood’s resistance committee, one of the many groups that used to organize pro-democracy demonstrations and now provides assistance to families in the line of fire.
The army conducted airstrikes and fired artillery at the Shambat Bridge to cut off access to the area from their foes, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF).
The paramilitary group used the bridge to resupply from the other side of the Nile, according to a resident discussing the evacuations.
The war between the army chief General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and his former deputy, RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, has killed more than 3,900 people, according to a conservative estimate by the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project.
It has displaced more than 3.3 million, according to the United Nations, and plunged millions more into hunger.
Much of the country’s already fragile infrastructure has been destroyed, with more than 80 percent of Sudan’s hospitals no longer in service, the World Health Organization (WHO) said.
The few health facilities that remain often come under fire or are looted, and struggle to provide care.
Consequently, for the victims of sexual violence that has run rampant during the war, “receiving the necessary health care” is an “immense challenge,” Souleima Ishaq Al-Khalifa, the head doctor in the government’s agency combating violence against women, told AFP.
Since April 15, Khalifa and her colleagues have documented 108 sexual assaults in Khartoum and Darfur — the restive western region on the border with Chad where a quarter of Sudan’s 48 million people live.
That toll is likely underestimated, like the human losses, as victims and caregivers are unable to travel due to the conflict.
Survivors of rape face a double burden, she adds, as “there are no more medicines in Khartoum,” and “in Nyala (South Darfur), they cannot reach the hospital because there is an RSF base in the way.”
Entire towns and villages have been destroyed in Darfur, an RSF stronghold, which was already ravaged in the 2000s by a bloody civil war and is now an epicenter of the ongoing fighting.
 

 


Syrian government, Kurds to extend truce: sources to AFP

Updated 24 January 2026
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Syrian government, Kurds to extend truce: sources to AFP

  • No official announcement has yet come from Damascus or SDF, but two sources said truce is to be extended by one month

DAMASCUS: The Syrian government and Kurdish forces have agreed to extend a ceasefire set to expire Saturday, as part of a broader deal on the future of Kurd-majority areas, several sources told AFP.

No official announcement has yet come from Damascus or the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), but two sources said the truce is to be extended by one month.

On Tuesday, Damascus and the SDF agreed to a four-day ceasefire after Kurdish forces relinquished swathes of territory to government forces, which also sent reinforcements to a Kurdish stronghold in the northeast.

A diplomatic source in Damascus told AFP the ceasefire, due to expire on Saturday evening, will be extended “for a period of up to one month at most.”

A Kurdish source close to the negotiations confirmed “the ceasefire has been extended until a mutually acceptable political solution is reached.”

A Syrian official in Damascus said the “agreement is likely to be extended for one month,” adding that one reason is the need to complete the transfer of Daesh group militant detainees from Syria to Iraq.

All sources requested anonymity because they are not allowed to speak to the media.

After the SDF lost large areas to government forces, Washington said it would transfer 7,000 Daesh detainees to prisons in Iraq.

Europeans were among 150 senior IS detainees who were the first to be transferred on Wednesday, two Iraqi security officials told AFP.

The transfer is expected to last several days.

Daesh swept across Syria and Iraq in 2014, but backed by a US-led coalition, the SDF ultimately defeated the group and went on to jail thousands of suspected militants and detain tens of thousands of their relatives.

The truce between Damascus and the Kurds is part of a new understanding over Kurdish-majority areas in Hasakah province, and of a broader deal to integrate the Kurds’ de facto autonomous administration into the state.

Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa’s Islamist forces toppled longtime ruler Bashar Assad in 2024.

The new authorities are seeking to extend state control across Syria, resetting international ties including with the United States, now a key ally.

The Kurdish source said the SDF submitted a proposal to Damascus through US envoy Tom Barrack that would have the government managing border crossings — a key Damascus demand.

It also proposes that Damascus would “allocate part of the economic resources — particularly revenue from border crossings and oil — to the Kurdish-majority areas,” the source added.

Earlier this month, the Syrian army recaptured oil fields, including the country’s largest, while advancing against Kurdish forces.