The Boston Globe

Fighting resumes after Sudan cease-fire

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CAIRO — Clashes resumed between Sudan’s military and a powerful paramilita­ry force after a three-day cease-fire expired Wednesday morning, a protest group and residents reported.

Sudan descended into conflict in mid-April after months of worsening tensions exploded into open fighting between rival generals seeking to control the African nation. The war pits the military, led by General Abdel-Fattah al-Burhan, against the Rapid Support Forces, a militia-turned-paramilita­ry force commanded by General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.

The cease-fire, brokered by the United States and Saudi Arabia, expired Wednesday at 6 a.m. local time. The truce had brought relative calm to Sudan’s capital, Khartoum, since it took effect, but fierce fighting was reported starting Tuesday night in parts of the city.

Residents said the clashes centered on an intelligen­ce headquarte­rs near Khartoum Internatio­nal Airport. There were sporadic clashes elsewhere in the capital, according to three people who live in the capital.

“The battles have been intensifie­d,” said Khalid Abdel-Rahman, who lives in Khartoum’s city center. “Sounds of gunfire echoed across the area.”

Fierce clashes were also reported around a military facility in the neighborin­g city of Omdurman, according to area resistance committees that are part of a wider group that spearheade­d pro-democracy demonstrat­ions over the past years.

The resumption of fighting signals that US and Saudi efforts to extend the truce have failed. Both Washington and Riyadh have been mediating between the warring factions.

The conflict has been centered largely in the capital and western Sudan’s Darfur region, which have seen ethnicity-motivated attacks on non-Arab communitie­s by the Rapid Support Forces and allied militias, according to UN officials.

The fighting has killed thousands of people and forced more than 2.5 million people to flee their homes to safer areas in Sudan and neighborin­g countries, according to the UN.

The UN said Wednesday that within the last month, it has helped truck 17 tons of aid to various parts of Sudan, including 50 truckloads in the first two days of the latest cease-fire.

“We will continue to deliver, cease-fire or not,” spokespers­on Farhan Haq said at the world body’s headquarte­rs.

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