Videos showed difficult conditions during the evacuation of patients, which was carried out in random ways driven by haste for fear of hitting the hospital, and close shelling was heard during the evacuations.

The Shabak program (2023/4/18) monitored the complaint of a medical staff member at the People's Hospital talking about the lack of supplies, saying, "Since yesterday, we have no food or basic needs. There are also no safe passages to exit and no one cares about them. Our situation is miserable and our situation is difficult," the program also monitored the condemnation and resentment of tweeters on social media about the targeting and shelling of Sudanese hospitals by the parties to the conflict.

Ismail wrote: "Oxygen was completed in the People's Hospital, and the beatings were carried out by the forces that are democratic, and the forces that are afraid of us. So they demand their eviction. "Every accident street and its hospitals should be evacuated tonight in front of a reel, their situation is difficult without food and two days of shelling and bullets."

While Maria considered the ongoing war a struggle for power paid by the average citizen, who "if he comes before the center of the opening of the fire," denouncing the failure to open safe paths or evacuate the stranded citizens, "of course da bra from the bombing of the popular hospital, and the shortage of medicines and insulin in particular."

As for Lulu, she called for the cessation of the war immediately after the cessation of "the basics of life such as water, electricity and treatment in hospitals, and services stopped because of the war," adding, "In the end, the loss is only the homeland and the Sudanese people, the war is in Ramadan is not right, every minute people see what they can get water from the grocery store and no medicine from the pharmacy."

Mohammed tweeted, "The support and the army, if they were good for citizens, would have respected the truce set for them to help the wounded, and the hospitals were functioning, not bombing."

UN Secretary-General António Guterres had earlier warned of the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Sudan, saying: "The situation is heading towards heavy loss of life, including many civilians. Any further escalation could be devastating for the country and the region."

Guterres urged "all those who have an impact on the situation to use it for peace and support efforts to end the violence, restore order and return to the path of transition (...) "The humanitarian situation in Sudan was already precarious, and now it is catastrophic."