In Sudan, more than 60 people died after a drone strike on a refugee camp
More than 60 people were killed in the Sudanese city of Al-Fasher after an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) hit a shelter for displaced people. This was reported on October 11 by Al Jazeera TV channel, citing data from doctors.
"Medical sources in Al-Fasher <...>: 60 people were killed as a result of shelling by the operational support forces of a shelter in the city," the media channel said.
According to the British newspaper The Guardian, citing data from the city's resistance committee, the strike was carried out by the paramilitary group "Rapid Reaction Forces" (RSF). The militants targeted the Dar al-Arkama temporary accommodation center on the territory of the Sudanese University.
The Al-Fasher Committee said that the bodies of people remained littered under the rubble. The incident was called a "bloodbath" and called for the intervention of the international community.
Prior to that, on August 19, Al Jazeera TV channel reported the deaths of six Palestinians in the Gaza Strip when Israel fired on tents housing refugees from the fighting and people who had lost their homes. Four civilians were also killed when shells hit a tent in Deir el-Balakha, the media said. At least 21 people died in just one night.
In mid-July, 12 people were killed in an Israeli air force strike on a Syrian refugee camp in eastern Lebanon. Warplanes struck the Wadi Faara area in the north of the Bekaa, one of which targeted a camp for displaced Syrians.
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