El-Daein, September 6(Darfur24)The Humanitarian Aid Commissioner for East Darfur State, Mohamed Ahmed, said that the number of displaced people who arrived in the city of El Daein, the capital of the state, as a result of the war taking place in a number of cities in the country, amounted to more than 80 thousand families in East Darfur State.
According to the Sudan News Agency, the commissioner appealed to the humanitarian organizations working in the state to urgently intervene to help those arriving from the scourge of war in East Darfur state, stressing that the state continued to receive large numbers of arrivals from the country’s various states.
The city of El Daein, the capital of East Darfur, is the only city among the cities in the Darfur region that has not witnessed battles between the army and the Rapid Support since the outbreak of war between the two parties last April. According to Darfur 24’s monitoring, most of those fleeing to the city of El Daein are residents of the city of “Nyala,” the city in Darfur most affected by the war between Army and Rapid Support. In the past weeks, the city witnessed acts of violence and fierce battles that left hundreds of civilians dead and wounded and forced thousands of citizens to flee to the cities of El Daein and El Fasher in East and North Darfur.
The Humanitarian Aid Commissioner stated that the humanitarian situation in the state requires concerted efforts from governments and humanitarian organizations to provide food and shelter supplies to those fleeing the war, explaining that the Commission is in the process of conducting extensive surveys to inventory and register arrivals to provide assistance to them in East Darfur.
Observers expect that waves of flight from the city of Nyala will continue in the coming days after the army escalated its combat operations in the city and brought in the air force. Last Sunday, for the first time, the warplane bombed several sites in the city of Nyala, leaving large numbers of dead and wounded and a state of terror among the residents who are still clinging to it. By staying in the city.