UN raises alarm on civilian deaths in Khartoum fighting
Africa
By
AFP
| Mar 20, 2025
Dozens of civilians have been killed by shelling and bombardments in and around Khartoum, the United Nations said Thursday, as fighting for control of the Sudanese capital intensifies.
The UN Human Rights Office demanded an end to the "lawlessness and impunity" in war-ravaged Sudan, where the SAF regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have been locked in a battle for power since April 2023.
"We are receiving troubling reports of escalating violence against civilians in Khartoum, amid continued intense hostilities," spokesman Seif Magango said in a statement.
"Dozens of civilians, including local humanitarian volunteers, have been killed by artillery shelling and aerial bombardment by the Sudanese Armed Forces and Rapid Support Forces in eastern Khartoum and north Omdurman since March 12."
The war has escalated in recent months, with the army seeking to reclaim territory in Khartoum and beyond.
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Less than a kilometer now separates army units in central Khartoum from the presidential palace, overrun by RSF troops at the start of the war.
Nearly two years of fighting have left large swathes of the capital unrecognisable.
Magango said credible reports indicated that the RSF and allied militia had raided homes in eastern Khartoum, carrying out summary killings and arbitrary detentions, and looted food and medical supplies from community kitchens and medical clinics.
The UN rights office has also received allegations of sexual violence in the Al Giraif Gharb neighbourhood.
Meanwhile SAF and affiliated fighters are also reported to have engaged in looting and other criminal activities in areas they control in Khartoum North and East Nile, Magango said, amid widespread arbitrary arrests in East Nile.
"We call once again on both parties -- and all states with influence over them -- to take concrete steps to ensure the effective protection of civilians, and to bring an end to the continuing lawlessness and impunity," Magango said.
The fighting has plunged Sudan into what the UN calls the world's largest humanitarian catastrophe.