The paramilitary group says that “the Army Control camp after launching land and aerial assaults on Friday.
The Paramilitary Sudan Paramilitary Forces (RSF) have announced that the control of the famine reached the Zamzam camp in the western region of Darfur, after two days of heavy bombardments and shootings there and in nearby areas at least and humanitarian workers.
The RSF said in a statement on Sunday that he deployed “military units to ensure civilian medical workers in Zamzam … after successful to release the camp completely from the control of the” Ardanese Ardanesas Forces (SAF).
The paramilitary group on Friday launched terrestrial and aerial assaults in the bearer capital of El-Fafas de North Darfur and the nearby travel camps in Zamzam and Abu Shouk.
The United Nations said Saturday that more than 100 people were afraid of RSF attacks, while a faction aligned in the army led by the governor of Darfur, Minni Minnaawi, on Sunday put the toll in more than four times.
The RSF denied attacking civilians within Zamzam, saying that the SAF was using the camp as a “military base” and used civilians as “human shields.”
In recent weeks, the RSF has intensified its attacks against refugee fields around El-Fafasher in its effort to take advantage of the last capital of the state in Darfur, not under its control.
Around 180 km (112 miles) east of El-Fafasher, in Um Kadadah, the activists also reported that the paramilitaries killed 56 civilians for two days of attacks in a city that resorted to El-Fafasher.
The RSF has also been accused of rights groups on the use of brutal sexual violence as a weapon against civilians.
The fight intensified after the army last month recovered the capital Jartum, around 1,000 km (620 miles) to the east.
The conflict has essentially divided Sudan into two, with the army that remains in the north and the east, while the RSF controls the majority of Darfur and parts of the south.
The war has killed tens of thousands, uprooted more than 12 million and created what the United Nations have described as the worst humanitarian crisis in the world.
Zamzam and Abu Shouk are among the five areas in Sudan, where the famine was detected by the integrated food security phase classification, IPC, a global hunger monitoring group.
It is estimated that 25 million people, half or the population of Sudan, now face extreme hunger.