Zürcher Nachrichten - The Sudanese who told the world what happened in El-Fasher

EUR -
AED 4.292163
AFN 75.332487
ALL 95.397394
AMD 438.877827
ANG 2.091806
AOA 1071.725436
ARS 1618.712771
AUD 1.661273
AWG 2.103714
AZN 1.995441
BAM 1.948598
BBD 2.350412
BDT 143.370078
BGN 1.955799
BHD 0.440173
BIF 3468.778754
BMD 1.16873
BND 1.487004
BOB 8.064193
BRL 5.848092
BSD 1.166987
BTN 108.258855
BWP 15.667092
BYN 3.34942
BYR 22907.111094
BZD 2.347025
CAD 1.620316
CDF 2688.079559
CHF 0.925628
CLF 0.026576
CLP 1045.943265
CNY 7.980066
CNH 7.985296
COP 4260.933035
CRC 540.103677
CUC 1.16873
CUP 30.971349
CVE 109.858941
CZK 24.369307
DJF 207.811889
DKK 7.472521
DOP 70.270268
DZD 154.560715
EGP 62.298007
ERN 17.530952
ETB 183.116468
FJD 2.584645
FKP 0.868289
GBP 0.872165
GEL 3.143194
GGP 0.868289
GHS 12.842532
GIP 0.868289
GMD 85.897274
GNF 10239.154198
GTQ 8.927004
GYD 244.147586
HKD 9.154681
HNL 30.993443
HRK 7.534331
HTG 153.01443
HUF 367.673741
IDR 20006.03066
ILS 3.546173
IMP 0.868289
INR 108.952473
IQD 1528.74946
IRR 1538194.97898
ISK 143.205055
JEP 0.868289
JMD 184.508024
JOD 0.828599
JPY 186.682412
KES 151.011415
KGS 102.205534
KHR 4671.732416
KMF 490.866993
KPW 1051.855013
KRW 1739.9061
KWD 0.360775
KYD 0.972505
KZT 551.471659
LAK 25734.879142
LBP 104507.520935
LKR 368.288737
LRD 214.726332
LSL 19.146531
LTL 3.450956
LVL 0.706953
LYD 7.41858
MAD 10.846808
MDL 20.106682
MGA 4843.099013
MKD 61.417988
MMK 2455.225454
MNT 4177.048774
MOP 9.414203
MRU 46.644593
MUR 54.369304
MVR 18.068624
MWK 2023.520694
MXN 20.338478
MYR 4.644527
MZN 74.751672
NAD 19.146531
NGN 1587.170439
NIO 42.941281
NOK 11.134612
NPR 173.21377
NZD 2.007458
OMR 0.449528
PAB 1.166987
PEN 3.938542
PGK 5.051329
PHP 70.572014
PKR 325.498298
PLN 4.255764
PYG 7547.10451
QAR 4.254475
RON 5.08935
RSD 116.937776
RUB 90.369239
RWF 1704.200959
SAR 4.380708
SBD 9.417801
SCR 17.747402
SDG 702.407138
SEK 10.91144
SGD 1.491668
SHP 0.872575
SLE 28.779976
SLL 24507.690348
SOS 666.934886
SRD 43.767762
STD 24190.354611
STN 24.409777
SVC 10.211257
SYP 129.180366
SZL 19.151214
THB 37.697387
TJS 11.092102
TMT 4.096399
TND 3.409996
TOP 2.814022
TRY 52.247378
TTD 7.919727
TWD 37.154519
TZS 3036.424041
UAH 50.702096
UGX 4318.039729
USD 1.16873
UYU 47.085962
UZS 14190.549114
VES 556.125986
VND 30784.352358
VUV 137.818414
WST 3.19588
XAF 653.541391
XAG 0.015743
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.158552
XCG 2.103226
XDR 0.812796
XOF 653.541391
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.164793
ZAR 19.343072
ZMK 10519.971638
ZMW 22.201938
ZWL 376.330634
  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.63

    +0.18%

  • BCC

    -0.4100

    80.17

    -0.51%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • NGG

    -0.0300

    90.29

    -0.03%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.02

    +0.31%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    58.81

    -0.07%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    58.21

    -0.26%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.43

    +0.18%

  • RIO

    1.1300

    98.26

    +1.15%

  • BCE

    -0.5400

    23.35

    -2.31%

  • BP

    0.5400

    46.44

    +1.16%

  • AZN

    -0.9600

    204.03

    -0.47%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    33.3

    -0.12%

  • VOD

    -0.1600

    15.69

    -1.02%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2700

    16.96

    -1.59%

The Sudanese who told the world what happened in El-Fasher
The Sudanese who told the world what happened in El-Fasher / Photo: - - AFP

The Sudanese who told the world what happened in El-Fasher

"Sixteen killed." "Seven killed." "Thirty-one killed." "People are eating cowhide to survive." "The bombs are getting closer." "They're shooting people trying to run away."

Text size:

These were the grim updates shared with AFP's veteran Sudan correspondent Abdelmoneim Abu Idris Ali by people trapped in the 18-month-long siege of El-Fasher, a city overrun by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) two weeks ago.

Throughout the siege and ensuing battle, it was thanks to ordinary civilians that AFP and other news organisations were able to form a picture of what was happening there.

They were Dr Omar Selik, Dr Adam Ibrahim Ismail, Sheikh Moussa and activist Mohamed Issa -- men who relayed vital information from a city mostly cut off from communications.

They have all since been killed.

Until their deaths they played a crucial but, for security reasons, anonymous role in documenting Sudan's two-year war between the army and the RSF.

Ismail, a young physician, was detained by RSF fighters on October 26 as he tried to flee the city.

He was shot dead the following day.

Until his last moments, Ismail had been treating "the wounded and the sick" at the Saudi Hospital, El-Fasher's last functioning medical facility, according to the Sudanese Doctors' Union.

AFP's Abu Idris Ali learned of Ismail's death through that statement, having spoken to him only days earlier.

"His voice was weary," Abu Idris Ali recalled from Port Sudan.

"Every time we ended a call, he said goodbye as if it might be the last time."

- 'War machine' -

In September, Abu Idris Ali had already lost three other local sources -- people who answered his calls and questions whenever communications allowed.

They were killed in a drone strike on a mosque in El-Fasher on September 16, which killed at least 75 people.

"Their voices painted a picture of El-Fasher," he said.

"Through them, I heard the groans of the wounded, the sorrow of the bereaved, the pain of those crushed under the war machine."

Before the war broke out in April 2023, AFP journalists criss-crossed the vast country, regularly visiting far-flung areas of Darfur.

It was there that Abu Idris Ali first met Sheikh Moussa, who opened the door to his modest hut in 2006, beginning a two-decade-long friendship.

Though he never met the tireless Dr Selik or the fiery 28-year-old Mohamed Issa, Abu Idris Ali said, "their voices ring in my ear every day."

Dr Selik, a kind-hearted medic who acted as a key source for journalists worldwide, witnessed the collapse of El-Fasher's health system before his own demise.

Hospitals were shelled, shuttered, or emptied of supplies, yet he continued to work tirelessly.

"He always tried to hide the tinge of sadness in his voice when he gave me toll figures," Abu Idris Ali recalled.

"He spoke like he was talking to a patient's family, breaking the news of the death of a loved one."

Fearful for his own family, he sent them to safety while staying behind to save lives.

Since his death, other doctors have taken up the mantle, but bombs fell daily, striking hospitals and killing medical staff.

- 'Another kind of grief' -

Only days before his death, activist Issa told AFP he had fled the famine-hit Abu Shouk displacement camp, overrun by the RSF.

At 28, after months of crossing frontlines to deliver food, water and medicine to trapped families, he was killed.

"Every time I asked him what was happening in the city, his voice would ring out boisterous: 'nothing bad inshallah, I'm a little far away but I'll go find out for you!'" Abu Idris Ali said.

"You couldn't stop him -- and off he went."

Sheikh Moussa had been uprooted from his South Darfur village 22 years ago by the Janjaweed militia, from which the RSF would end up descending.

He spent the rest of his life in refugee camps.

"Violence broke out over and over outside his door, yet his laugh never faded," Abu Idris Ali recalled.

When bombs rained down on El-Fasher, Sheikh Moussa "would speak endlessly of the pain his people were facing, but if you ever asked him how he was, he would only ever say: al-hamdulillah, thank God".

"Every phone call, I could see him, always sitting cross-legged in the shade outside his door, always in a blindingly white jalabiya robe and matching prayer cap, always smiling despite the horrors around him."

Sheikh Moussa never made it home to his village, between El-Fasher and Nyala, the South Darfur state capital.

"Many of those 75 people gathered in that mosque had run for their lives just days before, but an RSF drone showed them there was no fleeing death," Abu Idris said.

"Every death is a tragedy, one we are accustomed to reporting. Yet it is another kind of grief when it is someone you have broken bread with, someone whose voice you heard every day."

F.Schneider--NZN