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Paramilitaries launch first attack on Port Sudan: army

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PORT SUDAN: Sudanese paramilitaries on Sunday struck Port Sudan, the army said, in the first attack on the seat of the army-aligned government in the country's two-year war.

The paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), at war with the regular army since April 2023, have increased their use of drones since losing territory including much of the capital Khartoum in March.

Army spokesman Nabil Abdullah said in a statement that the RSF "targeted Osman Digna Air Base, a goods warehouse and some civilian facilities in the city of Port Sudan with suicide drones".

He reported no casualties but "limited damage" in the city, on Sudan's Red Sea coast.

AFP images showed smoke billowing from the area of the airport in Port Sudan, about 650 kilometres (400 miles) from the nearest known RSF positions on the outskirts of Khartoum.

In the eastern border town of Kassala, some 500 kilometres south of Port Sudan, near Eritrea, witnesses said three drones struck the airport on Sunday for the second day in a row.

An AFP correspondent in Port Sudan said his home, about 20 kilometres from the airport, was shaking as explosions were heard early Sunday.

A passenger told AFP from the airport that "we were on the way to the plane when we were quickly evacuated and taken out of the terminal".

On social media, users shared videos which AFP was not able to immediately verify showing a large explosion followed by a cloud of smoke rising from the blast site.

Flights to and from Port Sudan, the country's main port of entry since the start of the war, were suspended until further notice, a government source told AFP.

The rare attacks on the airports in Port Sudan and Kassala, both far from areas that have seen much of the fighting since April 2023, come as the RSF has expanded the scope and frequency of its drone attacks.

The paramilitaries led by Mohamed Hamdan Daglo have been battling the regular army, headed by Sudan's de facto leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, in a devastating war that has killed tens of thousands of people and uprooted 13 million.

Drone warfare

In the early days of the war, the government relocated from Khartoum to Port Sudan, which until Sunday's attack had been spared the violence.

UN agencies have also moved their offices and staff to Port Sudan, where hundreds of thousands of displaced people have sought refuge from the war.

The conflict has left Sudan, Africa's third largest country, effectively divided.

The army controls the centre, east and north, while the RSF has conquered nearly all of the vast western region of Darfur and parts of the south.

Lacking the army's fighter jets, the RSF has relied on drones, including makeshift ones, for air power.

Sudan's government has accused the United Arab Emirates of supplying the paramilitaries with advanced drones.

The Gulf state has long denied reports from UN experts, US politicians and international organisations that it was providing support to the RSF.

Satellite imagery analysed by Yale University's Humanitarian Research Lab, which tracks the conflict using remote sensing data, shows six advanced drones at the RSF-controlled Nyala Airport in the western Darfur region.

In a report issued in April, it said that the Chinese-made drones "may be capable of long-range surveillance and strikes".

Sunday's attack is the latest in a series of drone attacks the RSF has launched on military and civilian infrastructure deep in army-held territory.

On Saturday, a source from the army-aligned government reported the war's first drone attack on Kassala.

A drone strike on Thursday hit an army base in the southern city of Kosti, only about 100 kilometres from the border with South Sudan.

In late April, a drone strike on the city of Atbara, halfway between Port Sudan and Khartoum, caused persistent electricity blackouts in several areas including in Port Sudan.


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