Sudan Conflict Updates: Army vs RSF

Sudan's interior minister sacked amid lawlessness

BBC Monitoring
Sudan's military leader Lt Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan has sacked the acting interior minister, Anan Hamed Mohammed Omar, who is also the police chief.

In a statement, Gen Burhan named Khalid Hassan Muhyi al-Din as the new general director of police.

No reason was given for the sacking but Gen Burhan had earlier dismissed, in similar decrees, the governor of the central bank and two foreign ministry diplomats.

The police have been inactive in conflict-hit areas, including the capital, Khartoum, since the fighting erupted on 15 April. As a result, acts of lawlessness, including looting and robbery, have been widely reported in these areas.

A month of fighting between Sudan's rival military factions appears to have no end in sight despite much-touted truce talks brokered by the US and Saudi Arabia.
 
Are you pro RSF ?
Burhan is the reason why hemeti gained so much support and influence within the past 4 years. f*ck the army it's been a month and they can't settle this war. So many people lost their lives and homes, humiliated, and then this failure of a commander comes out of his hole looking all smug and happy like everything's fine. f*ck him
 
Are you pro RSF ?
Out of every 100 Sudanese person, you might find like 5 of them in support of the RSF because they're either associated with them or directly benefit from their control, not out of moral obligation. I wish we could exterminate every janjaweedi in the country but at the same time I don't blindly support the army who have toppled the civilian government 2 years ago and destroyed any hope of democracy in the country
 
It was Embassies then, and now civilian homes. It is quickly deteriorating.

That is some severe slashing.

ูˆุฒุงุฑุฉ ุงู„ุฎุงุฑุฌูŠุฉ : ู†ูุฏูŠู† ู‚ูŠุงู… ู…ู„ูŠุดูŠุง ุงู„ุฏุนู… ุงู„ุณุฑูŠุน ุจุงู„ู‡ุฌูˆู… ุนู„ู‰ ู…ู‚ุฑ ุงู„ุณูุงุฑุฉ ุงู„ู‚ุทุฑูŠุฉ ุจุงู„ุฎุฑุทูˆู…ุŒ ูˆุงู„ุนุจุซ ุจู…ุญุชูˆูŠุงุชู‡ุง ูˆุชุฎุฑูŠุจ ุงู„ุฃุซุงุซ ูˆุณุฑู‚ุฉ ุงู„ู…ู‚ุชู†ูŠุงุช ูˆุฃุฌู‡ุฒุฉ ุงู„ุญุงุณูˆุจ ูˆุงู„ุณูŠุงุฑุงุช ุฏูˆู† ู…ุฑุงุนุงุฉ ู„ู„ุฃุนุฑุงู ูˆุงู„ู‚ูˆุงู†ูŠู† ุงู„ุฏูˆู„ูŠุฉ.

ู†ู‡ุจ ู…ู†ุฒู„ ุงู„ุจุฑูˆููŠุณูˆุฑ ุนู„ูŠ ุดู…ูˆุŒ ูˆู†ู‡ุจ ุฎุงู†ุฉ ุชุญูˆูŠ ู…ูƒุชุจุชู‡ ุงู„ุณู…ุนูŠุฉ ูˆุงู„ุจุตุฑูŠุฉ ูˆู…ุฎุทูˆุทุงุชู‡ุŒ ูˆุณุฑู‚ุฉ ุณูŠุงุฑุชู‡.
 
And it gets worse with the arrival of heavy weaponry.
ุชูƒู‡ู†ุงุช ุจุงุดุชุจุงูƒุงุช ุนู†ูŠูุฉ ููŠ ู…ู‚ุจู„ ุงู„ุฃูŠุงู… ู…ุน ูˆุตูˆู„ ุทู„ุงุฆุญ ุณู„ุงุญ ุงู„ู…ุฏูุนูŠุฉ ุฅู„ู‰ ุงู„ุฎุฑุทูˆู…ุŒ ุจุนุชุงุฏ ุญุฑุจูŠ ุซู‚ูŠู„ ูŠุชู…ุซู„ ููŠ ุฑุงุฌู…ุงุช ุงู„ุตูˆุงุฑูŠุฎ WS-1B ุดูˆุงุธ-2 , ูˆู…ุฏุงูุน ุฐุงุชูŠุฉ ุงู„ุญุฑูƒุฉ 122 ู…ู„ู… ูˆ ุฑุงุฌู…ุงุช ุงู„ุตูˆุงุฑูŠุฎ ุงู„ุตูŠู†ูŠุฉ TYPE-86 A ูˆุฑุงุฌู…ุงุช ุงู„ุตูˆุงุฑูŠุฎ ุงู„ุฑูˆุณูŠุฉ BM-21 ุบุฑุงุฏ ูˆุงู„ู…ุฏุงูุน ุงู„ู…ุฌุฑูˆุฑุฉ ู†ุฌูˆู…ูŠ 130 ู…ู„ู….
 
Gold for safe passage: How a family of 12 escaped from Sudan
e94f8ccf-814f-4bd1-8407-1032055dc00b-1-1684862287.jpg

More than a dozen hours later, at approximately 1am on April 24, we arrived at the Argeen crossing. I looked on in hope as Egypt was a mere 10km (6.2 miles) away.

A long line of buses ahead of us signalled a crisis, one whose magnitude I did not foresee. The bus driver disembarked, summoning four of us women. He callously explained that, despite his earlier agreement, he could not ferry us to Aswan and that we would have to make our own arrangements. No amount of pleading worked to convince him otherwise.

We would have to find a new driver and vehicle to get to Egypt.

In hindsight, I believe he made millions running the same route, cheating many other women like us desperate to leave out of precious time and money. My anger built up as I realised that we were victims not just of a war economy that followed us to the border, but of traders during a crisis who exploited womenโ€™s unassuming tools in navigating a toxic male-dominated public space.

 
Now that this conflict has put Darfur in the spotlight again, we need a non-Arab Darfurian to correctly present the history of their region
 
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The savages are vandalising comrades HQs

This is tame compared to what they did in Darfur; the Arabs (and any Riverine related population) were the last groups to arrive in Darfur (14th Century) -- and Khartoum used them to engage in ethnic-cleansing and land theft against the native Fur, Zaghawa, Berti and Masalit tribes.
 

Aurelian

Forza Somalia!
VIP
UAE is funding bots for RSF, all of them has the same footprint, accounts dating back from 2011-2014, female pfp and posting the same thing.
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The paradoxes of Sudanese politics
Abdelwahab El-Affendi, President and Provost, Doha Institute for Graduate Studies.

This paradox is one of many surrounding Sudanโ€™s conflicts. I have been asked on numerous occasions by observers of Sudanese politics about the apparent contradiction between the endemic political violence and conflict that dominates public life, and the phenomenal civility that Sudanese people demonstrate in social contexts towards both compatriots and strangers alike, even amid the numerous conflicts that have grown in intensity, ferocity, and longevity over the years.

 
The paradoxes of Sudanese politics
Abdelwahab El-Affendi, President and Provost, Doha Institute for Graduate Studies.

This paradox is one of many surrounding Sudanโ€™s conflicts. I have been asked on numerous occasions by observers of Sudanese politics about the apparent contradiction between the endemic political violence and conflict that dominates public life, and the phenomenal civility that Sudanese people demonstrate in social contexts towards both compatriots and strangers alike, even amid the numerous conflicts that have grown in intensity, ferocity, and longevity over the years.


The political leaders (of any Nation) are largely representative of their socieities and its sense of morality and philosphical/ideological underpinnings.

The idea that Omar El-Bashir and all the other dictators in Sudan's history (including Muแธฅammad Aแธฅmad ibn al-Sayyid สฟAbd Allฤh) are somehow an aberration, is laughable.
 
The political leaders (of any Nation) are largely representative of their socieities and its sense of morality and philosphical/ideological underpinnings.

The idea that Omar El-Bashir and all the other dictators in Sudan's history (including Muแธฅammad Aแธฅmad ibn al-Sayyid สฟAbd Allฤh) are somehow an aberration, is laughable.
There's still paradoxes. Like how upper-class Sudanis empathize with poor thieves but justify torturing and sometimes even killing them. After Garang "died" (assassinated by Israel) violent Southern thugs were lynched by armed Northerners. Even Northerners that were victims empathized with the Southerners.
 
There's still paradoxes. Like how upper-class Sudanis empathize with poor thieves but justify torturing and sometimes even killing them. After Garang "died" (assassinated by Israel) violent Southern thugs were lynched by armed Northerners. Even Northerners that were victims empathized with the Southerners.


If your people could ostensibly empathize in that instance... why couldn't they empathize when the North was undeniably in the wrong in far more consequential matters?

Why wasn't empathy a factor when large scale land-theft (the trigger for the North-South wars) brought up as one of the seminal grievances?

When Nimeiry promised to return Southern lands (per the terms of the 1972 Peace Agreement)... there was 9 years of peace between the North and South.

Isn't it sad that we could have had peace since the 70s if only people's right to their lands had been respected?
 

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