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No Reprieve in Sudan, Even for Holiday, as General Rejects Cease-Fire Calls - The New York Times

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Gunfights in the capital, Khartoum, continued for a seventh day, despite pleas for a pause as the Muslim-majority nation marked the end of the holy month of Ramadan.

As people in Sudan marked the major Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr on Friday, forces led by the two warring generals vying for control of the country ignored calls for a cease-fire and clashed across the nation for a seventh day.

Sudanese civilian coalitions and international officials had called for a three-day pause in fighting to allow people to gather for the Eid holiday marking the end of Ramadan, to evacuate loved ones and to seek food and medical care.

Fighting on the holiday had “left no room for the joy that our people deserve,” Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the head of Sudan’s army and the country’s de facto leader, said in his first public speech since the clashes began. But he added: “We are confident that we will overcome this ordeal with training, wisdom and strength, in a way that preserves the security and unity of the country and enables us to transition to civilian rule.”

Residents in several neighborhoods in the capital, Khartoum, reported intense shelling and gunfights in the streets, and many across Sudan continued to face a desperate situation as they struggled to flee battle areas or get access to food and water. Up to 15,000 people have crossed the border from Sudan into neighboring Chad since the beginning of the conflict last Saturday, the International Rescue Committee also said on Friday.

“This is the worst Eid ever — for sure,” said Walaa Mirghani, a doctor who is sheltering in the Mamoura area of Khartoum.

For a city that has experienced coups, violent crackdowns on protesters and even attacks from rebels, nothing topped the street-by-street fighting that has convulsed the capital in recent days, she said.

The fighting in her neighborhood Friday had been incessant since 6 a.m., she said, with huge explosions shaking the ground below. With only intermittent power and food and water supplies running low, she worried about the coming days.

“I believe we are going to witness a disaster,” Ms. Mirghani, 39, said.

At least 413 people have been killed and 3,551 others wounded in the clashes, according to the World Health Organization. At least nine children and several aid workers have lost their lives as a result of the fighting. And the State Department said on Thursday night that one American has been killed.

Repeating a pattern that has played out several times over the past week, the Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group, led by Lt. Gen. Mohamed Hamdan, said that it had agreed to comply with a cease-fire. But his rival, General al-Burhan, did not commit to the pause in his remarks. And both sides persisted with their assaults.

It remained unclear which of the two warring generals was in control of Sudan, Africa’s third-largest nation. Countries including the United States prepared to evacuate their citizens, including embassy personnel, though U.S. officials said Friday that no decision had yet been made on whether to do so, and a State Department spokesman, Vedant Patel, said Americans should have no expectation of a coordinated evacuation.

General al-Burhan maintained in his remarks that the military under his leadership was committed to a peaceful transition to civilian rule. But the army leader, who rose to power in 2019 when the former dictator Omar Hassan al-Bashir was ousted from power, has derailed the country’s transition to democratic rule in the past.

In late 2021, he and General Hamdan joined forces to carry out a coup that toppled the civilian prime minister and shattered a fragile power-sharing agreement between the military and civilians. But the two generals could not agree on a timeline for bringing the paramilitary forces under the umbrella of the army. This month, just as they were expected to sign a deal and hand over power to civilians, the forces of the two generals began clashing violently in Khartoum, the capital, and other cities.

Despite the latest calls for a cease-fire, General al-Burhan said on Friday, “Your armed forces are advancing to defeat the rebels.”

Muslim worshipers greeting one another after prayers in Khartoum on Friday. Residents in several neighborhoods of the city reported intense gunfights in the streets.Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

At least 20 hospitals have shut their doors because of shelling or because of shortages of water, fuel and supplies like oxygen and blood for transfusion, the U.N. body said.

Eight more facilities were also facing closure because of exhaustion among medical workers, the W.H.O. added. The situation was particularly dire in Khartoum, where the warring parties have attacked hospitals and clinics, and hijacked ambulances.

General al-Burhan, the head of the army, acknowledged that the clashes had caused heavy casualties, destroyed property and forced families across the country to flee their homes.

Observers remained doubtful that any cease-fire would hold soon, or that General al-Burhan would soon pave the way for civilian rule without first winning the battle for control of the country.

“The indiscriminate shelling, the lack of independent monitoring on the ground and the weak command and control structures of the army make it impossible for any truce to hold for now,” said Mohamed Osman, the Sudan researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Khartoum and Sudan have inherited so much sadness.”

With the crisis now in its seventh day, humanitarian concerns nationwide were escalating. The United Nations’ World Food Program said the conflict was hindering access to meals for school-age children and those suffering from malnutrition. The agency also said that its offices and warehouses in Nyala, a city in South Darfur State, had been looted, leading to the loss of 4,400 tons of food.

On Thursday, the United Nations secretary general, António Guterres, had called on the rival parties to observe a three-day cease-fire after he held a virtual meeting with regional and global bodies, including the African Union, the Arab League and the European Union. And Antony J. Blinken, the U.S. Secretary of State, also spoke to both warring generals and urged them to commit to a nationwide cease-fire through Sunday.

But the clashes on Friday echoed the events of recent days, in which calls for and agreements to cease-fires quickly collapsed.

On Friday, Khartoum residents said they tried to bring some normalcy into their lives and enjoy their Eid festivities. But those plans were quickly interrupted, as was the case of Hamid Khalafallah, who began baking cookies with his sister only to abandon that after loud bombardments began near the family’s home north of the capital.

“This Eid is different than any other I have experienced,” Mr. Khalafallah, 33, said in a phone interview. “The violence is catastrophic on so many levels.”

Fleeing a neighborhood in southern Khartoum on Friday.Ebrahim Hamid/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Elian Peltier, Farnaz Fassihi and Michael Crowley contributed reporting.

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