Reaching the nearby and nearby camps “dangerously restricted”, with an estimated 450,000 people in this step.
The United Nations has warned that relief organizations are struggling to respond to the deep humanitarian crisis in North Darfur, Sudan, which was led by attacks by the semi -military rapid support forces (RSF).
In a late Sunday, the United Nations Human Coordinator of Sudan said in a statement released on Sunday that access to humanitarian aid is still “seriously restricted” in the capital of El Fasher and its surrounding areas, where RSF has launched multiple attacks in recent weeks.
These attacks sparked mass migration from ZamzamAbu Shouk and other refugee camps, which is “increasingly fluid” and “unpredictable” amid fears that RSF is preparing a wider attack.
Two years after its struggle with the military government of Sudan, RSF attacked Zamzam It was said that it may protect up to one million people – and Abu Shaw to you The camps for more than a week only, killing at least 300 people and forcing up to 400,000 people to flee 60 km (37 miles) across the desert to the city of Tola.
In its statement, NKWeta-SALAMI said that up to 450,000 displaced people “are increasingly cut off from supply and assistance chains, which exposes them to an increased risk of spreading the epidemic, malnutrition and famine.”
She called for granting the actors of the United Nations and NGOs “immediate and continuous access to these areas to ensure the provision of savior support for life safely and on.”
“Completely disastrous”
At the end of last week, the doctors without borders a medical charity said that the displaced in Topilla “is facing a catastrophic situation at all.”
“There is no source of water, no sewage facilities, nor food,” said Thepolt Hindler of MSF said.
Project coordinator Marion Ramstein said that the NGO witnessed more than 170 people with gunshots and Farah, 40 percent of them are women and girls.
The newcomers told Tobilla News Agency to Agence France Presse that they were stolen from their property by the paramilitary forces, as many women reported that they were raped on the road.
Tawila is controlled by an armed group that has been kept out of the conflict between RSF and the regular army, which erupted in April 2023.
The conflict divided Sudan into two parts, where the army controlled the north and the east, while RSF controls most of Darfur and parts of the south.
The war killed tens of thousands of people, uprooted more than 12 million, created what the United Nations described as the worst humanitarian crisis in the world.
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