How did Sudanese People Find their Property in Omdurman after Expulsion of RSF ?
Sudan Events – Agencies
A group of Sudanese families began returning to their homes in the city of Omdurman in Khartoum State after the Sudanese army regained control of large parts of the city and expelled the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) .
But when the people arrived at their homes, they were surprised by the condition they found them in, as a video spread on social media platforms of a Sudanese woman who returned to her home in Omdurman, where she found it burned. She said, crying: “We came to find the house was empty, this is what remains of our house, O Mohammad, the house.” “It’s cracked, we don’t have a roof.”
One of the tweeters, called Mohammad, also commented on the clip, saying, “This is our home, and thank God for what he wanted, and thank God the family is fine… God has given and God has taken, and may God compensate and strengthen the hearts of all Sudanese families for what they have lost.”
A video clip was spread on social media platforms showing Major General Abdul Rahman Al-Sadiq Al-Mahdi inspecting his father’s house in Omdurman, which was vandalized and broken, and other clips showed the devastation and destruction in the city by the RSF before they were forced to leave it.
The clips also monitored the destruction and devastation that befell Asia Hospital in the Al-Shuhada neighborhood in Omdurman, and one of them showed the hospital building being burned and vandalized.
As these clips spread, a state of anger and shock prevailed among the audience on social media platforms in Sudan, as tweeters began narrating some of what they saw when they returned to their homes, and one of them said: “We came to our house in Omdurman also after the looting and beating that happened to it, and the graffiti on the wall.” And sniper and sniper supplies.”
Bloggers pointed out that thousands of families will return to their homes and will find them uninhabitable, and their homes may collapse due to being bombed, and walls or ceilings may fall on them due to burning and cracking.
Some observers wondered who benefits from the vandalism of public property and the homes of defenseless civilians, and they called on citizens to count their losses in the hope that they will be compensated for them later, and to hold accountable those who caused the vandalism of public and private property after the end of the war that has been going on in Sudan for more than 11 months.
Activists said that Sudan needs infrastructure reconstruction companies and the rehabilitation of hospitals, the airport, roads, bridges and government headquarters.
Experts issued serious warnings about the danger of encouraging the return to residential areas before taking a package of measures to confirm the viability of homes and civilian objects without exposing the returnees to serious risks.
According to activists on social media, at least a thousand bodies were collected during the past days in the neighborhoods of Omdurman.