Battles raged in the streets of Khartoum as the tussle for power between the warring generals of the country entered its second month on Monday.
A fresh barrage of airstrikes in Khartoum was reported Monday, with residents saying the situation was only getting worse. Fierce clashes were reported in the cities of Omdurman and Bahri as well.
Residents caught in the crossfire have been the hardest hit, with basic needs like food, water, and electricity in short supply.
West Darfur’s Medical system may collapse
Violence also renewed this week in El Geneina in the volatile West Darfur region of Sudan, with the health system nearing “total collapse,” medics said.
The UN estimates that only 16% of hospitals in the capital are fully functional, while doctors worry about dwindling medical supplies as the numbers of those injured doesn’t seem to ebb, DW reported.
Meanwhile, Burhan, as the head of the Transitional Sovereign Council, fired Sudan’s Interior Minister Anan Hamed Mohammed Omar, who is also the general director for the police. He appointed Khalid Hassan Mouheiddine as the new general director for the police.
Nearly 1,000 people have been killed in the monthlong fighting, according to medics, with violence over the weekend in El Geneina killing at least 280 people, according to Sudan’s Doctor’s Union.
Hemedti dismisses rumours about his death
Hemedti dismissed rumours that he had been killed by telling people in a voice message that “I am moving freely around my forces, I am present in Bahri, I am present in Omdurman, I am present in Khartoum, I am present in Sharq al-Nil.”
“They are spreading rumours that Mohamed Hamdan has been killed, and these are all lies that show that they are being
defeated … I am, thank God, present with the troops,” he said.
The fighting between the two men has gotten worse, with Burhan declaring that he was freezing the RSF’s assets, and Hemedti threatening to hang the army chief in a public square in an audio recording of their latest spat.
Some 200,000 people have fled into neighbouring countries and more than 700,000 people have been displaced internally, triggering a humanitarian crisis that threatens to destabilize the region.
