The Japan Times - Sudan army recaptures presidential palace from RSF

EUR -
AED 3.965339
AFN 76.565343
ALL 99.699979
AMD 426.695387
ANG 1.94449
AOA 987.816829
ARS 1156.490821
AUD 1.716157
AWG 1.943246
AZN 1.831977
BAM 1.95621
BBD 2.178437
BDT 131.117489
BGN 1.956648
BHD 0.406951
BIF 3197.940838
BMD 1.079581
BND 1.44539
BOB 7.455563
BRL 6.199282
BSD 1.078916
BTN 92.488676
BWP 14.749956
BYN 3.530908
BYR 21159.794232
BZD 2.167234
CAD 1.544843
CDF 3098.398621
CHF 0.952461
CLF 0.026273
CLP 1008.200078
CNY 7.729213
CNH 7.852313
COP 4499.964914
CRC 538.707952
CUC 1.079581
CUP 28.608905
CVE 110.289655
CZK 24.963139
DJF 191.938463
DKK 7.46164
DOP 68.203667
DZD 144.512589
EGP 54.5845
ERN 16.19372
ETB 141.548765
FJD 2.481847
FKP 0.837744
GBP 0.83369
GEL 2.995874
GGP 0.837744
GHS 16.739065
GIP 0.837744
GMD 77.863615
GNF 9343.055615
GTQ 8.32345
GYD 225.979539
HKD 8.395656
HNL 27.672803
HRK 7.536449
HTG 141.648765
HUF 401.040593
IDR 17943.804231
ILS 3.961253
IMP 0.837744
INR 92.465669
IQD 1415.715176
IRR 45457.244707
ISK 143.501511
JEP 0.837744
JMD 169.311281
JOD 0.76539
JPY 162.774989
KES 139.670236
KGS 93.485147
KHR 4330.056315
KMF 492.629903
KPW 971.640693
KRW 1584.322612
KWD 0.333016
KYD 0.897905
KZT 540.730349
LAK 23435.195787
LBP 96879.20703
LKR 320.350702
LRD 215.844623
LSL 19.721862
LTL 3.187723
LVL 0.653028
LYD 5.21451
MAD 10.38381
MDL 19.467547
MGA 5051.734342
MKD 61.570851
MMK 2266.67009
MNT 3758.393487
MOP 8.64705
MRU 42.776592
MUR 49.432984
MVR 16.670402
MWK 1873.572191
MXN 21.927906
MYR 4.784992
MZN 68.96514
NAD 19.721862
NGN 1654.937827
NIO 39.713748
NOK 11.32008
NPR 148.01442
NZD 1.887297
OMR 0.415628
PAB 1.079581
PEN 3.952011
PGK 4.39452
PHP 62.353476
PKR 302.679195
PLN 4.196101
PYG 8629.450211
QAR 3.929436
RON 4.98332
RSD 117.358138
RUB 90.856339
RWF 1542.267266
SAR 4.048436
SBD 9.171619
SCR 15.523628
SDG 648.226194
SEK 10.797201
SGD 1.446151
SHP 0.848381
SLE 24.625102
SLL 22638.282043
SOS 616.443685
SRD 39.250949
STD 22345.154038
SVC 9.44616
SYP 14036.576132
SZL 19.721862
THB 36.70427
TJS 11.779499
TMT 3.776567
TND 3.354905
TOP 2.600107
TRY 41.045576
TTD 7.336831
TWD 35.742565
TZS 2853.553118
UAH 44.952928
UGX 3958.987811
USD 1.079581
UYU 45.463277
UZS 13955.056912
VES 73.911702
VND 27607.68715
VUV 133.167912
WST 3.047859
XAF 656.839871
XAG 0.031512
XAU 0.000352
XCD 2.922778
XDR 0.812994
XOF 656.839871
XPF 119.331742
YER 265.686954
ZAR 19.70603
ZMK 9717.530204
ZMW 31.059091
ZWL 347.62475
  • RBGPF

    68.2200

    68.22

    +100%

  • BCC

    -0.4100

    100.36

    -0.41%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    22.86

    -0.35%

  • GSK

    0.2100

    38.52

    +0.55%

  • RIO

    -0.5300

    62.34

    -0.85%

  • BCE

    0.5100

    23.16

    +2.2%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.7

    +0.18%

  • RELX

    0.1000

    50.07

    +0.2%

  • SCS

    0.7000

    11.3

    +6.19%

  • NGG

    0.3600

    63.93

    +0.56%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    10.15

    -0.99%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13

    +0.31%

  • AZN

    0.1200

    72.84

    +0.16%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    9.36

    0%

  • BTI

    0.3700

    41.19

    +0.9%

  • BP

    -0.0100

    34.41

    -0.03%

Sudan army recaptures presidential palace from RSF
Sudan army recaptures presidential palace from RSF / Photo: © UGC/AFP

Sudan army recaptures presidential palace from RSF

The Sudanese army recaptured the presidential palace in Khartoum from the Rapid Support Forces on Friday, dealing a major blow to the paramilitaries who responded with deadly drone attacks.

Text size:

State television had broadcast scenes of fighters celebrating in the palace, before three of its journalists were killed in a drone strike, according to an army source.

They were "covering the army retaking the Republican Palace" when an RSF one-way attack drone struck the complex, also killing or wounding a number of army personnel, the source told AFP on condition of anonymity.

In a statement shared to Telegram, the RSF said it had launched a "lightning operation" around the palace which "killed more than 89 enemy personnel and destroyed various military vehicles".

"The battle for the Republican Palace is not over yet," the RSF vowed.

Witnesses reported multiple drones targeting the area, where soldiers had celebrated through the blackened halls of the palace.

In video footage broadcast by state television, young men in yellow bandanas -- volunteer fighters who had taken up arms alongside the army -- waved flags and ululated behind shattered windows.

The devastating battle for power between Sudan's rival generals began on April 15, 2023, when much of Khartoum quickly fell to the RSF.

The infantrymen of the regular army had proved no match for the highly mobile paramilitaries in the battle for the capital's streets.

- 'Blow' to RSF -

In the nearly two years since, the war has killed tens of thousands of people and uprooted more than 12 million, including more than half of the pre-war population of greater Khartoum.

After months of humiliating defeats for the army, the tide of the war seemed to turn late last year when the army launched a counteroffensive in the central farming state of Al-Jazira, taking advantage of the defection of a local commander.

The recapture of the presidential palace, a symbol of Sudanese sovereignty, "is a blow" to the RSF, a retired general told AFP, adding that the paramilitaries' withdrawal from the capital is only a "matter of time".

But RSF fighters are still scattered around the city centre, hiding in nearby buildings and stationed in part of the bombed out airport, military sources said.

The paramilitaries have kept up their shelling of army-held neighbourhoods from their remaining positions in the city's western and southern outskirts, the sources added.

A military expert told AFP that the RSF had lost elite fighters in the battle for the presidential palace.

"With the army entering the Republican Palace, which means control of central Khartoum, the militia has lost its elite forces," the expert said, requesting anonymity for their safety.

"Now the army has destroyed equipment, killed a number of their forces and seized control of one of its most important supply centres in Khartoum."

- 'Complete' victory? -

The RSF pledged to "continue to fight" to dislodge the army from areas it has retaken.

In a video address last week, RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo Daglo vowed to resist the army's counteroffensive.

The army announced an operation to "cleanse" the city centre of holdout RSF fighters.

"What remained of RSF militias have fled into some buildings" in central Khartoum, a military source told AFP, requesting anonymity because they were not authorised to speak to the media.

Army spokesman Nabil Abdallah vowed troops would "continue to progress on all fronts until victory is complete and every inch of our country is purged of the militia and its supporters".

The army's retaking of the presidential palace may lead to its recapture of greater Khartoum but the vast western region of Darfur and much of the south remain largely in RSF hands.

More than eight million of Sudan's estimated 50 million people are on the brink of famine, which has already been declared in five areas of the country. Nearly 25 million are suffering dire food insecurity.

Y.Hara--JT