RSF strikes on hospital in Sudan’s El-Fasher kill 20 in 24 hours

A ceiling damaged by shelling shrapnel at a displaced persons center in El Fasher, Sudan, October 7, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 08 October 2025
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RSF strikes on hospital in Sudan’s El-Fasher kill 20 in 24 hours

  • Since the war erupted in April 2023, tens of thousands have been killed, millions displaced and nearly 25 million pushed into acute hunger

PORT SUDAN: Attacks by Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces on one of the last functioning hospitals in the besieged city of El-Fasher killed 20 people within 24 hours, medical sources said on Wednesday.

Those killed included two health workers, their colleagues at El-Fasher Hospital — one of the city’s last functioning health facilities — said.

The RSF is mounting its fiercest assault yet on El-Fasher as it seeks to seize the city from their rivals, the regular army.

Activists say El-Fasher, the last state capital in the vast western region of Darfur to elude the paramilitary’s grasp, has become “an open-air morgue” for starved civilians.

The strikes on Tuesday and Wednesday caused “significant damage to hospital buildings” and wounded a combined 24 people.

On Tuesday, a drone strike hit the maternity ward, killing eight people.

The artillery attack on Wednesday killed 12 more.

Most hospitals in El-Fasher have been repeatedly bombed and forced to shut, leaving nearly 80 percent of the city in need of medical care but unable to access it, according to the UN.

Across the country, hospitals have been routinely attacked, stormed by fighters and looted, with the doctors’ union saying 90 percent of hospitals have at some point been forced shut.

Dozens of health workers have been reported killed, including in what the UN says have been targeted attacks.

In El-Fasher, exhausted medical teams are already scrambling to treat the injured from daily attacks.

Doctors, using satellite internet connections to circumvent a communications blackout, say they have taken to using bits of mosquito netting as a substitute for gauze.

Nearly 18 months into the RSF’s siege, the city — home to 400,000 trapped civilians — has run out of nearly everything.

The animal feed families have survived on for months has grown scarce and now costs hundreds of dollars a sack.

The majority of the city’s soup kitchens have been forced shut for lack of food.

More than 1 million people have fled El-Fasher since the war began, accounting for 10 percent of all internally displaced people in the country, according to the latest figures released by the UN.


Israeli airstrike on a Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon kills 13 people, Lebanese ministry says

Updated 19 November 2025
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Israeli airstrike on a Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon kills 13 people, Lebanese ministry says

  • Hamas condemned the attack in a statement saying the strike hit a sports playground and denying that it was a training compound
  • Lebanon’s Health Ministry has reported more than 270 people killed and around 850 wounded by Israeli military actions since the ceasefire

SIDON, Lebanon: An Israeli airstrike on a Palestinian refugee camp in southern Lebanon on Tuesday killed 13 people and wounded several others, state media and government officials said. It was the deadliest strike on Lebanon since a ceasefire in the Israel-Hezbollah war a year ago.
The drone strike hit a car in the parking lot of a mosque in the Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp on the outskirts of the coastal city of Sidon, the state-run National News Agency said. The Lebanese Health Ministry said 13 people were killed and several others wounded in the airstrike, without giving further details.
Hamas fighters in the area prevented journalists from reaching the scene, as ambulances rushed to evacuate the wounded and the dead.
The Israeli military said it struck a Hamas training compound that was being used to prepare an attack against Israel and its army. It added that the Israeli army would continue to act against Hamas wherever the group operates.
Hamas condemned the attack in a statement saying the strike hit a sports playground and denying that it was a training compound.
Over the past two years, Israeli airstrikes on Lebanon have killed scores of officials from the militant Hezbollah group as well as Palestinian factions such as Hamas.
Saleh Arouri, the deputy political head of Hamas and a founder of the group’s military wing, was killed in a drone strike on a southern suburb of Beirut on Jan. 2, 2024. Several other Hamas officials have been killed in strikes since then.
Hamas led the Oct. 7, 2023 attack on southern Israel that killed about 1,200 people. That sparked Israel’s offensive on the Gaza Strip that killed tens of thousands of Palestinians, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.
A day after the Israel-Hamas war started, Hezbollah began firing rockets toward Israeli posts along the border. Israel responded with shelling and airstrikes in Lebanon, and the two sides became locked in an escalating conflict that became a full-blown war in late September 2024.
That war, the most recent of several conflicts involving Hezbollah over the past four decades, killed more than 4,000 people in Lebanon, including hundreds of civilians, and caused an estimated $11 billion worth of destruction, according to the World Bank. In Israel, 127 people died, including 80 soldiers.
The war ended in late November 2024 with a US-brokered ceasefire. Since then, Israel has carried out scores of airstrikes in Lebanon, saying that Hezbollah is trying to rebuild its capabilities.
Lebanon’s Health Ministry has reported more than 270 people killed and around 850 wounded by Israeli military actions since the ceasefire.