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At least 11 children killed in mosque attack

01:22 PM
At least 11 children killed in mosque attack
Photo of a mosque. Image used for illustration. PHOTO/Pexels

Residents of the regional capital of North Darfur are mourning more than 70 people killed in a single drone strike by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) on a mosque during Friday dawn prayers.

UNICEF said initial reports “indicate that at least 11 children, aged six to 15, were killed”.

The agency called the incident “shocking and unconscionable”, adding that the attack had also hit “adjacent homes” and many more children were hurt.

The attack has shaken the spirit of the entire state – it was a serious violation of the rules of war.

“We buried them inside the mosque in a mass grave,” says Mohamed Hassan Quba of Al Fashir’s revolutionary resistance committee, providing a lifeline for civilians.

“An RSF strategic drone monitored us as we worked to bury them – we knew it could be a double strike, but refused to stop. We persisted, and they were buried with great sadness.

“Drones have not left the sky of Al Fashir over the last 72 hours.”

Civilians seek safety

RSF drones are striking other targets in the Al Daraja neighbourhood in western Al Fashir, an area where civilians seek safety and medical treatment.

Since the Al Daraja mosque massacre, drones have dropped bombs on the last standing health facility in the city, the Saudi Hospital, already severely damaged by previous RSF shelling, as well as striking the home of the secretary-general of North Darfur, Mohamed Abdullah Adam, killing him and his wife.

These aerial attacks come after 16 months of the RSF starving, shelling and economically paralysing Al Fashir.

A final assault on a strangled symbol of regional power to complete their control of western Sudan.

But unlike other state capitals and key towns in Darfur where the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) have tactically withdrawn, surrendered or deserted civilians, Al Fashir’s fighters say they will battle it out until their last breath.

The Joint Task Forces defending the city from capture are made up of former rebels from across Darfur and residents – men and some women – who have taken up arms to defend their homes.

Governor of Darfur and commander of the Joint Task Forces, Arko Mini Minawi, says the fight is existential.

“This is a personal target and an ethnic target. That is the motivation that makes people withstand this – everyone knows if they surrender, they will be killed, and if they fight, they will survive. It is a matter of survival,” he says.

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