Sudan paramilitary group agrees to a ceasefire proposal
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Every single person who has arrived in Tawila has one or multiple members of their family that they cannot account for,” the leader of one humanitarian group told NBC News.
For more than two years, Sudan’s military and a powerful paramilitary force have torn the country apart in a war for power, both digging in against peace efforts even as atrocities mount and starvation spreads.
For more than two years, Sudan’s military and a powerful paramilitary force have torn the country apart in a war for power, both digging in against peace efforts even as atrocities mount and starvation spreads.
Explosions were reported near Sudan's capital Khartoum just hours after the RSF paramilitary forces said they agreed to a U.S.-backed truce proposal.
The roads are not safe. We continue to see [people] being detained and tortured. Women and children at risk of abuse."
While the war in Sudan has most often been portrayed as an internal conflict between two warring generals, the murky involvement of several foreign powers makes the conflict far more complex – and deadly.
The Rapid Support Forces, a paramilitary group that has been at war with the Sudanese military for over two years, said it has agreed to a humanitarian truce that was proposed by U.S.-led mediator group,
Sudanese Ambassador to India Mohammed Abdalla Ali Eltom claims UAE supplies weapons to RSF, asserting Sudan faces threats from non-regional actors, not civil war.