Drones hammer Sudan's gold and oil zone - the pivotal new front line
Drones hammer Sudan's gold and oil zone - the pivotal new front line 5 hours ago Barbara Plett UsherAfrica correspondent Intensified drone attacks on the new front line of Sudan's civil war have led to mass civilian casualties in recent weeks and are increasingly shaping the course of the conflict.
The conflict between the Sudanese regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has become one of the deadliest in Africa for civilians and shows no sign of abating despite US-led peace efforts. The near-daily drone strikes have hit targets including markets, health facilities, aid convoys and residential areas across the Kordofan region, prompting outrage from the UN and humanitarian officials. "The continued attacks by all parties on civilian objects must stop," the UN human rights chief Volker Türk said last week. "The parties must take urgent measures to protect civilians, including by refraining from the military use of civilian objects. "
Greater Kordofan comprises three states and serves as a vital axis linking the western Darfur region, controlled by the RSF, to the capital, Khartoum, in the eastern Nile Valley, now in army hands.
It began to intensify in Kordofan, a strategic area rich in gold and oil, once the SAF regained control of Khartoum last year. The south-central region became the main battlefield after the RSF consolidated its hold of Darfur by capturing the city of el-Fasher in October.
The RSF set up a parallel government last year, hardening the de facto division of the country. It did so in alliance with the rebel Sudan People's Liberation Movement-Army North (SPLM-N) which has its base in South Kordofan, securing access to experienced fighters, territory and border areas. The SPLM-N has been fighting against the central government and armed forces for decades, seeking to end the political and economic marginalisation of Sudan's Nuba and Blue Nile regions.
UN-backed food monitors said the two-year sieges of Kadugli and Dilling had created famine conditions.
The paramilitaries have been using drones from early in the war to overcome the army's air dominance.
Sudan's military uses drones from Baykar, Turkey's largest defence contractor.
Its supply is believed to have been buttressed over the last year by advanced Akinci combat models.
The Turkish government says it does not provide direct support to the SAF. In early February, the Sudanese army said it had destroyed drones and anti-aircraft missiles belonging to the RSF in the Kordofan and Darfur regions.
Five days later the army again announced it had destroyed an RSF air defence system, in West Kordofan state. The army's advance appears to have been aided by a disruption in the RSF's supply lines from Libya into the Kordofan region, reportedly targeted by Turkish drones launched from an Egyptian airstrip near the Sudanese border. Investigations by the New York Times and the Reuters news agency revealed that Egypt has become more involved in the war in the past six months, alarmed by RSF advances in Darfur. Recent attacks led by the SPLM-N in Blue Nile State south-east of the Kordofans also threaten to widen Sudan's war into a regional conflict.
Instead, a drone strike blamed on the Sudanese military hit families gathering at a water collection point in West Kordofan on the first day of the Muslim holy month.
Young children were among the dead.
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