Sudan's Rapid Support Forces kill 40 people in North Darfur displacement
camp attack
[August 12, 2025]
By FATMA KHALED
CAIRO (AP) — Sudan's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces launched attacks
Monday in a famine-stricken displacement camp outside of el-Fasher, the
capital of North Darfur province, killing 40 people, local rights groups
said.
The Emergency Response Rooms group working at the Abu Shouk displacement
camp said in a statement on Facebook that the RSF — which is at war with
the Sudanese military — raided parts of the camp targeting citizens
inside their homes. The community activist group, which provides
assistance across Sudan, said at least 19 people were also injured.
The Abu Shouk displacement camp outside of el-Fasher, which houses
around 450,000 displaced people, has been repeatedly attacked over the
course of the war. The Sudanese military has control over el-Fasher
despite frequent strikes by the RSF.
Meanwhile, the Resistance Committees in el-Fasher confirmed the attacks,
saying on Facebook that the scene “reflected the extent of the horrific
violations committed against innocent, defenseless people.” The
Resistance Committees are a group of local citizens from the community
that includes human rights activists.

The Humanitarian Research Lab at Yale University posted satellite
imagery showing 40 vehicles present at the Abu Shouk Camp on Monday. In
an effort to corroborate reports of the RSF attack, the lab said the
vehicles were in the northwest neighborhoods of the camp.
In its report, Yale HRL said it gathered and analyzed photos and footage
allegedly “showing RSF shooting at people crawling away from them and
berating and using ethnic slurs.”
Other satellite imagery gathered Saturday by the group apparently showed
the RSF blocking routes that people use to escape el-Fasher by
controlling points across the el-Fasher to Kutum road north of the city
and an opening in the direction of Mellit, North Darfur.
The civil war in Sudan erupted in April 2023 in the capital Khartoum
before spreading across the country following simmering tensions between
the RSF and the army. The fighting has killed over 40,000 people,
displaced as many as 12 million and pushed many to the brink of famine.
The Abu Shouk camp is one of two camps with strong famine conditions,
according to humanitarians.
[to top of second column]
|

The Sudanese army said it clashed with RSF fighters on Monday in el-Fasher
beginning at around 6 a.m. and ending in the afternoon. It claimed
it defeated the paramilitary group, according to its posts on social
media.
“Our forces repelled a large-scale attack from several axes by the
terrorist militia and inflicted heavy losses on the enemy in lives
and equipment, as more than 16 combat vehicles were destroyed and
burned and 34 vehicles, including armored cars, were captured,” the
army claimed in a statement.
The RSF said on its Telegram channel late Monday that it made
advances in el-Fasher and seized military equipment, without
providing further details.
Darfur Gov. Mini Arko Minawi said on Facebook that el-Fasher
“triumphed over those who betrayed their land” in an apparent
reference to the RSF in Monday’s fight.
Meanwhile, in North Kordofan province the RSF has been accused of
displacing over 3,000 families from 66 villages due to fighting
since early August, according to the Sudan Doctors Network. The
group also said the RSF looted the properties of those people and
stole their money and livestock. Those displaced ended up arriving
at Khartoum and White Nile provinces last week. The recent attacks
on the villages in the province killed 18 civilians and injured
dozens, according to the latest update by the United Nations.
U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric warned Monday of the “extreme dire
situation” in Sudan, while Edem Wosornum, the operations and
advocacy director at the U.N.'s humanitarian affairs agency, sounded
the alarm over the situation in el-Fasher, saying over 60 people
died from malnutrition in only one week, mostly women and children.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |