Today (Monday), Sudanese media outlets revealed widespread looting of shops, government institutions, and some neighborhoods in the city of Nyala, in the state of South Darfur. According to Al-Sudani newspaper, members of gang forces wearing civilian clothes stormed homes and institutions and looted them.
The newspaper quoted what it described as “security sources” that widespread looting was carried out by members of the Rapid Support Forces, and others wearing masked civilian clothes and riding motorcycles and four-wheel-drive vehicles, indicating that among the looted sites were the headquarters of (UNICEF, the Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of Finance, Education, Social Welfare and a market). phones east of the Bank of Sudan), and the looting included a number of Nyala neighborhoods.
The newspaper reported that the shooting inside Nyala caused a large fire in the Shatta market in Nyala, indicating that the civil defense was unable to extinguish the fire under the pretext that they did not have water to extinguish it.
The newspaper stated that the looting came after spreading rumors calling on civilians to vacate their homes at four o'clock in the morning, under the pretext that there was an airstrike on sites in the city.
And to the sounds of cannons, several international parties and international organizations continue their efforts to stop the fighting in Sudan, calling on the Sudanese army commander, Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, and the leader of the Rapid Support Forces, Muhammad Hamdan Dagalo, known as (Hamidti), to end the clashes between the two sides after dozens of deaths and hundreds of injuries.
Several countries offered their mediation for reconciliation between the two parties, especially after the Sudan Doctors Syndicate announced today that at least 97 people had been killed, stressing that the outcome does not include all the dead and that many of them were not transferred to hospitals due to transportation difficulties.
The office of the Kenyan president announced that the Intergovernmental Authority on Development for East African Countries (IGAD) decided to send the presidents of Kenya, South Sudan and Djibouti to Sudan to conduct reconciliation between the Sudanese army and the Rapid Support Forces, while Egypt and South Sudan offered mediation between the Sudanese army and the Rapid Support Forces.
Okaz (Jeddah) @okaz_online