Residential buildings between structures aimed at a paramilitary attack on the city of El-Fafasher, according to activists.
The Paramilitary Fast Support forces (RSF) have again attacked the city of El-Fafas in the western region of Darfur de Sudan, killing more than 30 people, an activist group said.
The attack of the RSF and the allied militias is the last deadly offensive in the area, the last strength of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) in the region devastated by the war.
The resistance committees in El-Fafas said that other people’s dishes were injured in Sunday’s attack, which involved “heavy artillery bombings.” The RSF renewed the assault on Monday, bombing residential buildings and open markets, according to the activist group, which tracks the war.
They were not immediately reported immediately. The RSF did not immediately respond to the statements.
For more than a year, the RSF has tried to snatch the control of El-Fafasher, location at more than 800 km (500 miles) to the southwest of the capital, Jartum, from the SAF, launching regular attacks against the city and two large camps of hunger hunger.

However, the observers say that the attacks have intensified in recent months as the RSF suffered setbacks on the battlefield in Jart and other urban areas in the east and the center of the county.
It is estimated that El-Fafasher is home to more than one million people, including hundreds of thousands of those displaced by fighting.
Help ‘dangerously restricted’
The last violence occurs less than a week after a two-day attack by the RSF and its allied militias in E-Pasher, as well as Zamzam and ABU nearby should camp for internally displaced people, they killed more than 400 people, according to the united nation.
The attack forced up to 400,000 people to flee from the Zamzam camp, the largest in Sudan, which has become inaccessible for help workers, said UN spokesman Stephane Durric.
On Monday, the UN Humanitarian Chief, Tom Fletcher, described the situation in the region as “horrible.”
He said he had talked on the phone with General Saf Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and RSF leader Mohamed Hamdan Dag Alo, who promised to give “full access to get help.”
International aid agencies have long warned that a large-scale RSF assault against El-Fafasher could lead to a devastating urban war and a new wave of mass displacement.
The United Nations Fund for the Nation (UNICEF) has described the situation as “hell on earth” for at least 825,000 children trapped in El-Fafas and its surroundings.
The UN also warned about a catastrophic humanitarian situation.
“The humanitarian community in Sudan faces critical and intensifying operational challenges in northern Darfur,” Clementine Nkweta-Salami, a Humanitarian and resident coordinator of the UN in Sudan said Sunday.
He added that “despite repeated appeals, humanitarian access to El-Fasher and surrounding areas remains dangerous,” warning that the lack of access was increasing “the vulnerability of the sinks of thousands of people.”
NKWETA-Salami asked UN actors and NGOs to be granted “immediate and sustained access to these areas to ensure that support to save lives can be delivered safely already scale.”
Meanwhile, doctors of medical charity without borders (MSF) have asked for assistants to the city in the face of access resictions.
The brutal Civil War of Sudan began on April 15, 2023, after a faint power exchange agreement between General Saf Al-Burhan and the RSF Dagalo leader, also known as Hemedti, crumbled.
To date, more than 24,000 people have died to the bones in the fight, according to the UN, although activists say the number is probably much greater.
Millions have been displaced.