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“We have nothing left for us but death.”
‘They’re dying daily’
But the RSF has blocked food supplies and sources speaking to Reuters have said aid convoys trying to reach the city have been attacked. Prices for the goods that traders are able to smuggle in cost more than five times the national average.
What food civilians can get is poor. Some eat hay. Ambaz — peanut oil waste, which is typically used to feed animals — is reportedly now the primary source of food. But there are fears that even that is running out.

Ambaz — or peanut oil waste — is typically used to feed pets in Sudan. But now, it’s civilians’ primary source of food amid famine. Source: Supplied / Mohamed Dodah
Farhan Haq, deputy spokesperson for the United Nations’ secretary-general, said civilians in al-Fashir are at a breaking point. “Local sources say people are dying from hunger and malnutrition,” Haq told SBS News.
UNICEF estimates more than 330,000 people are facing malnutrition in the city of al-Fashir alone due to a total blockade of aid by RSF militants.
“These houses do not provide shelter or cover,” she said. “These children are not eating. Even the main meal is not available.”
What is happening in al-Fashir?
Besieged along with the army and its allies are hundreds of thousands of al-Fashir’s residents and people displaced by previous attacks, many living in camps that monitors say are already in famine.
“The entire Relief International staff had been wiped out, including the camp director and nine other employees. I found their bodies stacked, each with a bullet wound to the head,” he said.

Mohamed Dodah (centre) fled to al-Fashir after the Rapid Support Forces raided his home in the Zamzam displacement camp. A new investigation estimates over 1,500 civilians were killed in the attack. Source: Supplied / Mohamed Dodah
Reports on the attack suggested up to 400 non-Arab civilians were killed during the three-day assault. The UN said “hundreds” of civilians, including 12 humanitarian workers, were killed.
“If they control al-Fashir, there will be killing and raping and kidnapping. Firstly, they will kill the leaders. They will catch me, [they will] put me in a prison — if not kill me,” he said.
No escape
“This is the norm. I say tell me more. What is happening? How are you feeling? He just tells me, we just survived another day. He sees it as, I just need to survive.”
“They’re just holding on for dear life.”
‘We are watching al-Fashir be murdered’
While both the military and the RSF have been accused of war crimes in the current conflict, several human rights groups, as well as the United States, say the paramilitary group has committed genocide in Darfur — a claim the militia denies. The RSF also denies committing genocide, saying it was not involved in what it describes as a “tribal conflict” in Darfur.