The conflict between the Sudanese Military (SAF) and the terrorist organisation Rapid Support Forces (RSF) is intensifying. Despite the RSF head, former camel herder Muhammad Dagalo, agreeing to a proposed three-month humanitarian truce – the fighting continues. And that is what you would expect from an organization like RSF.
KHARTOUM DECEMBER 2: The conflict between the Sudanese Military (SAF) and the terrorist organisation Rapid Support Forces (RSF) is intensifying, with the RSF claiming full control of Babanusa, a transport junction in the oil-producing South.
Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF) claimed on December 1 that they had seized control of the headquarters of the Sudanese Armed Forces’ (SAF’s) 22nd Infantry Division in the West Kordofan town of Babanusa.
The RSF framed the capture as a response to a “surprise attack” by the SAF. The RSF also accused the Sudanese army of a deadly strike on a nursing school in Southern Kordofan, reportedly killing dozens of students.
Despite the RSF head, former camel herder Muhammad Dagalo, agreeing to a proposed three-month humanitarian truce championed by the “Quad” mediators (US, UAE, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia), fighting continues.
SAF denied dismissing the “truce” as a tactic deliberately employed by the RSF to hide troop movements.
SAF Chief General Al-Burhan rejected the peace proposal and criticised the UAE’s inclusion, which has been accused of arming the RSF. The war, which erupted in 2023, has killed tens of thousands, displaced 12 million, and fuelled a massive humanitarian crisis.









