
Fifty years old Maha Abdullah, a tearful Sudanese housewife who was able to reach Saudi Arabia for the hajj pilgrimage, sees only one solution: "It needs God's intervention to change things."
According
to report, fire, air strikes and gun battles rocked Sudan's capital on
Saturday, witnesses told AFP, as the UN urged a stop to "wanton
killings" that have left decomposing bodies in Darfur.
While
fighting rages, relief efforts have stalled after more than two months of
fighting between rival generals.
Houses
in Khartoum shook from the fighting that continued unabated, residents said,
with entire families sheltering in place, running low on vital supplies in the
baking summer heat.
The
United Nations says nearly 1.5 million people have fled the capital since
violence erupted in mid-April, pitting the regular army against the
paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).
Entire
districts of Khartoum no longer have running water, and those who remain in the
city have had no electricity at all since Thursday, several residents told AFP.
The
battle for power between army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his former
deputy, RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, has killed more than 2,000 people,
according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project.
The
deadliest violence has raged in Darfur, a vast western region on the border
with Chad where the UN has warned of possible crimes against humanity and said
the conflict has taken an "ethnic dimension".
In
the South Darfur state capital Nyala, residents said they had been caught in
the crossfire. They reported battles, shelling and artillery strikes.
"Civilians
were killed, and wounded are arriving at the hospital," a medic told AFP
on condition of anonymity.
The
UN on Saturday urged "immediate action" to stop killings of people
fleeing El Geneina, the West Darfur state capital, by Arab militias aided by
the paramilitaries.
The
Geneva-based UN rights office said witnesses had given "corroborating
accounts" of militias targeting men from the non-Arab Masalit people.
It
said all but two of the 16 people it interviewed testified they had witnessed
"summary executions" and the targeting of civilians on the road from
El Geneina to the border between June 15 and 16.
"All
those interviewed also spoke of seeing dead bodies scattered along the road -–
and the stench of decomposition," the UN said.
Two-thirds
of health facilities in the main battlegrounds remain out of service, according
to the Sudanese doctors' union. The few hospitals still operating are extremely
low on medical supplies and struggling to obtain fuel to power generators.
The
UN says a record 25 million people -- more than half of Sudan's population --
are in need of aid and protection.
Aid
has reached at least 2.8 million people, the UN said, but agencies report major
hurdles to their work, from visas for foreign humanitarians to securing safe
corridors.
"The
army is... loath to let aid into the capital, fearing that packages will end up
in the RSF's hands" as has happened before, "allowing the
paramilitary to hold out longer", according to think-tank the
International Crisis Group (ICG).
The
United States, which along with Saudi Arabia sought to mediate between the
warring sides and ensure humanitarian aid can reach those in need, said
Thursday it had put its efforts on hold.
"Both
sides seek to use the humanitarian talks for tactical advantage... with the
military demanding that the RSF vacate residential areas and the RSF demanding
that the army cease its aerial barrages," ICG said this week in a report.
No
side appears willing to stand down, exacerbating the risk of prolonged conflict
with regional ramifications.
More
than 150,000 people have fled Darfur over the border to Chad, according to the
International Organization for Migration.
Chad,
which already hosted more than 680,000 refugees, needs massive financial and
technical support to confront this "unprecedented migratory crisis,"
Prime Minister Saleh Kebzabo said on Saturday.
Daglo's
RSF have their origins in the Janjaweed militias which former strongman Omar
al-Bashir unleashed in response to a rebellion by ethnic minorities in Darfur
in 2003, drawing charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.
"A
collapsed Sudan could create a haven for transnational militants... mercenaries
and traffickers who could plague the country's neighbourhood for years to
come," ICG warned.
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