Sudan Doctors warn of dozens of bodies in Bara homes

Sudan Doctors’ Network calls the events in Bara a crime against humanity, urging the UN and authorities to act immediately and provide safe passages for civilians.

News center- Amid the worsening humanitarian crisis  and ongoing armed

Conflict in sudan,the sudan Doctors Network announced the discovery of dozens of bodies piled up inside civilian homes in North Kordofan State.

The sudanese Docters Network revealed on Tuesday,November4, that dozens of bodies are plied up inside homes In the  city of Bara, located in North Kordofan state,central sudan.

In a press statement, the network expressed its deep concern over what it described as “ horrific crimes being committed against unarmed civilians,” confirming that field reports indicate “dozens of bodies are piled up inside homes after the Rapid Support Forces prevented the victims’ families from burying them, leaving the dead trapped in their houses while the living endure terror, hunger, and thirst.” The statement added that the number of missing persons is increasing daily amid a total communications blackout and the complete absence of any effective medical or humanitarian presence inside the city.

The network described the situation in Bara as “hell,” noting that waves of mass displacement continue under extremely harsh conditions, as civilians flee on foot into the unknown without food, medicine, or shelter, while health services have completely collapsed and diseases and malnutrition spread among children, women, and the elderly.

The Sudanese Doctors’ Network affirmed that “what is happening in Bara is a crime against humanity in every sense of the word,” calling on the United Nations, humanitarian and medical organizations, and the entire international community to take immediate and serious action to stop these violations, open safe corridors for civilians, and allow families to bury their dead with dignity.

These actions come as the scope of the war — which has claimed tens of thousands of lives and displaced millions over the past two years — has expanded to new areas of Sudan in recent days, raising growing fears of a worsening humanitarian catastrophe, especially after the Rapid Support Forces seized control of the strategic city of El-Fasher. Reports have emerged of mass killings, sexual violence, assaults on aid workers, looting, and kidnappings during the attack.

Despite repeated international appeals, both parties to the conflict continue to ignore calls for a ceasefire.