Renewed clashes with heavy and light weapons between the Sudanese army and the Rapid Support Forces in the capital Khartoum on Saturday morning, at a time when the West Darfur Medical Association announced that all basic services collapsed in the city of El Geneina, and all humanitarian organizations in the region left.

Al Jazeera correspondent reported hearing heavy weapons around the industrial zone, Hilla al-Jadida and Lamap, west of Khartoum.

Clashes also broke out in the south of Omdurman, and an explosion was heard accompanied by a military aircraft flying southwest of the city, and violent clashes caused the collapse of houses and the flight of a group of citizens from the vicinity of gunfire.

Sudanese army warplanes also bombed rapid support targets in Al-Jarif in the east and Al-Huda neighborhood east of Khartoum.

Politically, the envoy of the commander of the Rapid Support Forces, political adviser Youssef Ezzat, during his meeting with Kenyan President William Ruto in Nairobi, affirmed their support for the Jeddah talks, which came with Saudi-American mediation, pointing to their development in order to achieve a permanent ceasefire and the start of political negotiations.


On Thursday, Saudi Arabia and the United States announced the suspension of Jeddah talks between the parties to the conflict in Sudan as a result of gross and repeated violations of the ceasefire.

On May 26, Saudi Arabia and the United States announced that the parties to the conflict in Sudan had agreed to extend the ceasefire agreement signed between them for an additional five days.

Since April 15, widespread clashes have erupted in a number of cities in Sudan between the army led by Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the Rapid Support led by Mohamed Hamdan Daglo (Hemedti), killing and wounding hundreds, most of them civilians.

On the other hand, the West Darfur Medical Association said that all basic services, including health, water, electricity and communications, collapsed in the city of El Geneina, leaving all humanitarian organizations and lack security, shelter and food.

The union added that snipers and looting gangs are still killing civilians, and those trying to leave the city are subjected to looting and killing, noting that thousands of wounded do not find care, while people with chronic diseases, and pregnant women, die due to the lack of services.

The union stressed that the humanitarian and security tragedies that hit the states of West and Central Darfur remain the most severe and difficult, and warned that the situation is worsening day after day.