Aid groups urge UN to act before RSF attack in El-Obeid
Thirty-eight aid groups warn el-Obeid, Sudanโs besieged capital, faces imminent RSF attack risking genocide like el-Fasherโs 2023 takeover. The UN must act: halt arms flows, probe atrocities, and dema
Thirty-eight aid groups and human-rights organisations have warned that Sudanโs capital of the south, el-Obeid, is on the brink of a fresh military as
Read Full Story at Al Jazeera โWhy This Matters
The warning from 38 aid groups signals a potential new flashpoint in Sudanโs brutal civil war, where civilian centers are increasingly becoming targets of deliberate brutality. If el-Obeid falls, it would mark another catastrophic failure of international protection mechanisms, further eroding what little remains of Sudanโs civilian infrastructure and deepening the humanitarian catastrophe.
Background Context
The city of el-Obeid, a historic crossroads in central Sudan, has long been a strategic prize due to its location and role as a humanitarian hub. Since the outbreak of the war between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), the city has seen sporadic violence but remains one of the last major urban centers under partial government control. The RSFโs 2023 siege and destruction of el-Fasher set a grim precedent for urban warfare tactics.
What Happens Next
The coming weeks will likely determine whether el-Obeid becomes another site of mass civilian casualties or if a rapid international intervention can deter further escalation. Key variables include the SAFโs ability to fortify defenses, the RSFโs consolidation of supply lines, and whether diplomatic pressureโparticularly from African Union mediatorsโcan force a temporary halt to hostilities. The absence of a robust UN peacekeeping mandate leaves civilians dangerously exposed.
Bigger Picture
This crisis reflects a broader pattern of war crimes being normalized in Sudan, where armed factions exploit weak international enforcement. The failure to prevent atrocities in Darfur, Khartoum, and now potential genocidal campaigns in el-Fasher and el-Obeid underscores a systemic collapse in accountability, raising urgent questions about the efficacy of global humanitarian governance in conflict zones.

