The Sudanese army retains the presidential palace in Khartoum, hitting RSF | Sudanese war news

The Sudanese army retains the presidential palace in the cartoum, hitting the blow of fast forces support in a key symbolic victory.
The Sudanese army and its supporters are celebrated throughout the country after the troops in the capital in the capital in the capital in the capital.
The victory on Friday may be the most holy army after launching a key contrafensive against paramilitary forces for fast support (RSF) in September last year.
The RSF continues to control pockets in the southern Cartum, but has lost most of the capital since Sudan broke out to the Civil War in April 2023.
Development comes only a few days after RSF leader Mohamed Hamdan “Hemedti” Dagalo posted a video that persuaded his fighters not to give up the palace.
The civilians generally welcomed the army as liberators, despite some reports on the military, in alignment, who carried out a violation of human rights after the RSF withdrawal.
RSF committed countless crimes in Sudan, including in Khartoum.
The recent report of the United Human Rights Commissioner’s Office (OHCHR) revealed that the RSF Cartouum fighters had detained at least 10,000 people from the beginning of the war to June last year.
“In the areas of the RSF, they control, they kill people, rape women and destroy all of humanity. Whenever the army arrives, people become happy because they feel safer. Even children are joyful,” said Yousef, a young Sudan man.
A different scenario outside Khartoum
The army arrest of the presidential palace causes the fear that Sudan is increasingly approaching de facto divisions, analysts say.
The RSF already supports the parallel government and remains under control four of the five regions in the widespread region of Darfur, which is approximately the size of France.
RSF recently captured the strategic desert city of Al-Malih in northern Darfur, which is the last region in which the army and its aligned armed groups still have some control.
Despite the profit, the RSF struggles to catch El-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, where the army still has a garrison.
Sharath Srinivan, an expert on Sudan and a professor at Cambridge University, told Al Jazeera that Sudan seems to be moving into a “scenario in Libya”, referring to a cleavage of two competitive authorities that are aligned with a network of besieged groups and militia.
“He feels that geographical bifurcation is intensified, except El-Fasher, of course. The RSF must be secured by El-Fasher to ask for a de facto state, which is not safe at all,” he said.
Time for peace?
The army is long refused to engage in peace negotiations with RSF And he repeatedly said he was planning to regain the whole country.
The RSF also used diplomacy as a cover for the escalation of military operations in Sudan, analysts of Al Jazeera said. In January last year, Hemedti signed a “Declaration on Principles” with the alleged anti -war coalition known as Taqaddum.
Hemedti then visited several heads of state across Africa While his forces continued to plunder, kill and terrorize civilians in the state of Sudan in the state of Gazi, the main bread.
Both sides recently promised to continue to fight, raising fears that conflicts could be enhanced in the west of the country, especially in the regions of Cordofan and Darfur.
Fighting can also escalate in a cartoon because of a series of sophisticated weapons that flows into the ground. Just a few moments after the army celebrated the return of the presidential palace, the drone hit and killed three journalists in the area, according to.
Permanent struggles could spin huge region of Sudan deeper into restlessness. The conflict has already encouraged the largest humanitarian crisis in the world for most measures.
Tens of thousands of people have died, thousands have disappeared, and millions suffer from a catastrophic level of insecurity in food.