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Drones disrupt relative calm for months in Sudan's capital and hit airport

Sudan's military blamed the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Ethiopia for a drone strike on Monday that targeted Khartoum Airport. This is the latest of a series of attacks in recent days which has broken months?of relative calm?in Sudan's capital. Could not independently verify these claims. The allegations were made late Monday night. Neither country has commented immediately. Sudan accuses the UAE of backing paramilitaries called Rapid Support Forces, an allegation the Gulf state denies. Ethiopia was accused of involvement in the conflict by Sudan earlier this year.

Residents report that since Friday, strikes have been launched against military targets as well as civilian areas of a city in which people, ministries, and international agencies began returning after the army regained control in March 2025.

Witnesses reported that Monday's drone strikes targeted Khartoum International Airport, where the first fighting between the military forces and paramilitary Rapid Assistance Forces began in April 2023. The airport received its first flight internationally in three years just last week.

Asim Awad Abdulwahab, the army spokesman, said that the government has evidence that the attacks on several states that began March 1 originated from Ethiopia's Bahir Dar Airport. He was referring to data from a drone that had been downed mid-March and that had links to the airport as well as the United Arab Emirates. He said that the army had linked a drone launched from Ethiopia's Bahir Dar airport to Monday's attack.

Abdelwahab stated that "What Ethiopia and the UAE have done against Sudan is direct aggression and will not be met with silence."

DRONES HAVE DOMINATED CONFLICT

Locals who spoke under anonymity said that they believed that the Rapid Support Forces was behind the new attacks. The RSF is yet to comment on the attacks.

The Information Ministry announced earlier that no injuries or damage were caused in the airport attack. It will resume normal operations following routine safety procedures.

Drone warfare is the primary tool in the conflict that has caused what the U.N. describes as the worst humanitarian disaster on earth, with hundreds of thousands of deaths from violence, disease and hunger, and millions of refugees.

Over the weekend, witnesses reported that drones struck Khartoum and its twin city Omdurman in addition to the cities of al-Obeid west of Khartoum and Kenana south of it.

Emergency Lawyers, a group of activists, reported that one killed five civilians in a bus in southern Omdurman, on Saturday. On Sunday, another?killed the family of Abu Agla Keikal a tribal leader who had defected to the army from the RSF during the earlier war.

These attacks follow another defection by al-Nour al-Guba. A senior RSF officer who was welcomed into Khartoum with his forces?late last week, raising fears about tensions in the army coalition.

Sudan's conflict erupted when the RSF and Sudanese Army fell out over plans for integrating their forces and transitioning to democracy.

RSF "quickly" took over Khartoum, but was forced out last year. Since then, it has consolidated its control over the Darfur region in the west and opened a second front in the Blue Nile State along Ethiopia's border, which is also marked by drone attacks. Ethiopian media reported in February that it was hosting a training camp for thousands of RSF fighters and upgraded Asosa Airport airport to accommodate drone operations. (Written by Nafisa Altahir, edited by Andrew Heavens & Lincoln Feast)

(source: Reuters)