According to two military sources in the government-aligned Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), the death toll from Rapid Support Forces (RSF) attacks on a kindergarten and other locations in the city of Kalogi in South Kordofan state has increased to 47 people, mostly children, and to 50 others have been injured.
The RSF attacked the kindergarten on Thursday, according to the sources, before turning its attention to the civilians who had gathered to offer assistance in the chaos. A government building and a hospital in the city were also bombed.
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Due to some of the serious injuries suffered by some of the treated, the sources said this toll is not yet definitive.
At least nine people were killed, including four children and two women, in “deliberate suicide-drone attacks carried out in Kalogi town” by the RSF and its ally, the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement–North (al-Hilou), according to a report released on Thursday by the Sudan Doctors Network.
They continued, “This attack constitutes a grave violation of international humanitarian law, and it continues to target civilians and vital infrastructure.”
In the most recent instance of the brutal civil war, which pits the SAF against the paramilitary RSF, atrocities against civilians. Additionally, it is suspected that the SAF engaged in atrocities during the conflict.
Kordofan’s “history repeating itself”
The UN warned on Thursday that fierce fighting between rival armed forces could lead to a humanitarian catastrophe in the Sudanese Kordofan region.
After last month’s fall of el-Fasher, Sudan’s capital, where international community warnings of impending violence were largely ignored before widespread killings occurred, UN human rights chief Volker Turk claimed that history was “repeating itself” in Kordofan.
According to Turk, it is truly shocking to see history repeat itself in Kordofan so soon after the horrific events in El-Fasher, and he urged other countries to stop the area from experiencing the same fate.
At least 269 civilian deaths have been documented by the UN as a result of aerial bombardment, artillery fire, and summary killings since late October when the paramilitary RSF seized Bara in North Kordofan state.
The actual cost of the incident is probably much higher because of regional communication blackouts, which have led to reports of revenge attacks, arbitrary detentions, sexual violence, and child forced recruitment.
The RSF claimed earlier this week that it was in charge of Babnusa, West Kordofas, with footage showing its fighters rushing through the military base. The city’s fall was not claimed by the army.
Attention has turned to Kordofan in central Sudan now that it is the last major city under the army’s and its allies’ control since the fall of el-Fasher.
Due to its strategic significance, both sides are in a crucial position in Kordofan. The region serves as a crucial link between the conflicting factions’ heartlands and government-held territory in the west of RSF-controlled Darfur in the west.
The RSF would have a direct route to Khartoum, which government forces captured earlier this year, if they had control of major cities like El-Obeid.
The UN issued urgent warnings about potential atrocities before el-Fasher fell  in November. Those warnings were largely ignored.
Mass murders broke out after the city’s capture, with corpses emerging from satellite imagery, which prompted UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to refer to it as a “crime scene.”