UPDATE - Over 600 Sudanese civilians displaced from 2 South Kordofan villages amid rising insecurity, says UN migration agency

IOM says residents fled Tebsa, Afnori as violence intensified, while local groups accuse RSF of forced recruitment- Over 106,000 displaced from El-Fasher since RSF takeover last month

UPDATE WITH MORE DETAILS, ADDS DECK

By Adel Abdelrheem and Mohammad Sio

KHARTOUM, Sudan / ISTANBUL (AA) – More than 600 people fled two villages in South Kordofan due to worsening insecurity, the UN migration agency said Monday, as local groups accused the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) of attacking the area.

A statement by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said that its field teams estimated that 645 Sudanese were displaced from Tebsa and Afnori in Abbasiya Tagali locality on Nov. 22, citing a rapid deterioration in security conditions.

The displaced families have reached multiple sites across Abbasiya, while the situation on the ground remains “highly tense and volatile,” the statement added.

Two local groups, the Nuba Mountains Platform and the Tebsa Youth Gathering, accused RSF forces and the allied Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N) of besieging Tebsa for several hours, storming its market, looting property, and killing one resident and injuring another.

They also said that RSF fighters had detained about 700 young men from across the village and transported them to an SPLM-N camp as part of what it described as forced military conscription.

Neither the RSF nor the SPLM-N commented on the accusations.

For days, heavy clashes have erupted across the three states of the Kordofan region – North, West and South – displacing tens of thousands of civilians.

Separately, the IOM said that more than 106,000 civilians have fled El-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, since the RSF captured the city on Oct. 26.

According to the UN agency, a total of 106,387 people have been displaced from the city to 37 localities across 11 of Sudan’s 18 states, warning that severe insecurity along travel routes continues to hamper movement.

“The situation remains tense and unpredictable, with ongoing insecurity and continuous population movements,” it added.

The RSF now controls all five Darfur states, out of Sudan’s 18 states, while the army holds most of the remaining 13 states, including Khartoum.

Darfur makes up about one-fifth of Sudan’s territory, but most of the country’s 50 million people live in army-held areas.

The conflict in Sudan between the army and the RSF, which began in April 2023, has killed at least 40,000 people and displaced 12 million, according to the World Health Organization.

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