
African correspondent, BBC News
Women in Community Kitchen in El-Fasher in the surrounded means sitting on a desperate hat.
“Our children are dying in front of our eyes.” One of them speaks to the BBC.
“We do not know what to do. They are innocent. They are not related to the military or the rapid support. Our pain is worse than you can imagine.”
In EL-FASHER, the price has soared until the money used to deal with a weekly meal because of the lack of food. The international aid group accused the use of hunger as a war weapon.
The BBC still got a rare video of people trapped in the city, a local activist sent to us and filmed by a freelancer camera man.
The Sudanese army is fighting the RSF for more than two years after the commander co -coup.
El-Fasher in the West Darpur is one of the most cruel wires in the conflict.

The hunger crisis deteriorated this week by the rapid increase in cholera through the magnificent camps of those moved by the expanded battle as one of the most intense RSF attacks of the city.
The juniors strengthened the 14-month containment after losing the control of the capital Harum earlier this year, and strengthened the battle with El-Pasher, the last footsteps of Darpur’s army.
In the north and center of the country where the army wrestled territory in RSF, food and medical support began to be distracted by civilian pain.
But the situation is desperate in the conflict areas of the western and southern means.
At the end of last month, volunteers at MATBAKH-AL-Khair Common Kitchen of El-Fasher changed Ambaz to death. This is the residue of peanuts after the oil is extracted, and is usually supplied to animals.
Sometimes you can find a sorghum or a captain, but on the day of shooting, the kitchen manager says: “There is no flour or bread.”
“Now we have reached the time of eating Ambaz. God wants us to seek this disaster. There is nothing to buy in the market.”
The United Nations amplified the appeal of humanitarian temporary suspension in order to allow food convictions to the city, once again the war of Sudan’s envoy Sheldon once again demanded that the war was observed in accordance with international law.
The army has granted a truck to proceed, but the United Nations is still waiting for the official word of the military organization.
RSF advisers believed that the ceasefire would be used to promote food and ammunition to the “surrounding militia” of the military inside the El-Pacher.
They also argued that the group and allies were establishing a “safe path” so that civilians could leave the city.
EL-FASHER’s local respondents can receive some emergency cash through the digital banking system, but not far.
Mathilde VU, an advocate manager of the Norwegian Refugee Council, said, “The price of the market has exploded.
“Today, $ 5,000 (3,680 pounds) eats a meal for 1,500 people a day. Three months ago, the same amount can feed them throughout the week.”
Doctors say that people are dying in malnutrition. It is impossible to know how many reports that local health authorities cited more than 60 people last week.
The hospital cannot cope. Few people are still in operation. They are damaged by bombardment and lack medical supplies to help those who are injured by hunger and continuous bombing.
“We have a lot of malnutrition children who are admitted to the hospital, but unfortunately there is no single single flavor pocket.”
“They are just waiting for their death,” he said.
If you are hungry, you usually die for the first time.
“The situation is too miserable and too fatal.” The doctor tells us with a voice message.
“EL-fair children are dying every day due to lack of food and lack of drugs. Unfortunately the international community is just watching.”
The international non -governmental organizations working in Sudan declared this week that “ongoing attacks, the interference of aid, and the goal of important infrastructure shows the intentional strategy to infringe civilians through hunger, fear and fatigue.”
They said, “Anecdotive reports on the recent food spleen for military use are added to the pain of civilians.”
“There are no safe passes outside the city, and there are people who are blocked and faced with attacks, taxes on roads and checkpoints, community -based discrimination and death.”
In recent months, hundreds of thousands of people have fled. Many of the ZAMZAM displaced people are at the edge of El-Fasher, which was seized by RSF in April.
They arrive at Tilea, a 60km (37 mile) village in the city, and describe violence and robbery along the roads of RSF integrated groups with weak and dehydrated dehydration.
In crowded camps, life is safer but stalked by disease. The most deadly cholera.
It was caused by contaminated water, killing hundreds of people from the means, the destruction of the water infrastructure and the lack of food and medical care, and the rainy season was deteriorated by the rainy season.

Unlike EL-FASHER, Tawila AID workers can be approached at least, but supplies are limited, says John Joseph Ocheibi, a group project coordinator of the group called the International Medical Action Allies.
“We are lacking from the point of view of the (cleaning facility) that can handle this situation in terms of medical goods,” the BBC says. “We are using resources to see how we can do our best.”
The Sylvain Penicaud of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) presumes that there are only three liters of water per person per day at the camp. “I force people to get water from the sources that are lower than the basic needs,” he said.
Zubaida Ismail Ishaq is lying in a tent clinic. She was 7 months pregnant, healthy and tired. Her story is a trauma story that many people said.
She says she made a deal when she had little money before he flew away.
Her husband was arrested by men armed men on the way to Tawila. Her daughter suffered a head injury.
Zubaida and her mother came down with cholera shortly after arriving at the camp.
“We drink water without boiling it,” she says. “We don’t have anyone to get water. Because I come here, I have nothing left.”
Return to El -Fasher and we hear an appeal to the help of clustered women in the soup kitchen.
FAIZA Abkar Mohammed said, “We are tired. We want to release this siege.

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