Joint Force: Mercenaries from South Sudan, Kenya, Chad, Kenya, and 80 Colombians participated in El-Fashir Battle

 

El-Fashir: Sudanese Echoes

 

 

The Joint Force of the Armed Struggle Movements has disclosed new and important information regarding the treacherous attack on El-Fashir launched by the terrorist rebel Rapid Support Forces (RSF) militia and the forces of Al-Hilu.

 

 

The spokesman for the Joint Force, Colonel Ahmed Hussein, said that the recent battle demonstrated a remarkable and unprecedented participation of mercenaries of various nationalities alongside the RSF militia.

 

 

Ahmed Hussein confirmed the participation of mercenaries from South Sudan, Chad, Ethiopia, and Kenya, in addition to more than 80 mercenaries from Colombia.

 

 

 

Hussein asserted that a large number of these Colombians, who were tasked with operating drones and coordinating artillery shelling operations, were neutralized.

 

The spokesman for the Joint Forces attributed the increased recruitment of mercenaries from abroad to the militia’s failure to confront the armed forces, the Joint Force, and the popular resistance on the ground.

 

 

The official spokesperson for the Joint Force explained that the worst thing that happened was the militia’s use of Abdelaziz al-Hilu’s militias in a paid deal.

 

 

Ahmed Hussein explained that the militia tasked al-Hilu’s forces with targeting anyone attempting to leave El-Fashir, including women, children, and the elderly, in flagrant violation of all humanitarian laws.

 

 

 

 

 

The Joint Force called on the governments of the countries to which these mercenaries belong to assume their moral and legal responsibilities and communicate with the Sudanese government to halt this dangerous slide that implicates them in war crimes and crimes against humanity being committed against the defenseless Sudanese people.

 

 

In its statement, the Joint Force acknowledged that a conspiracy is being hatched against Sudan, led by parties seeking to control resources, displace the people, and replace them with armies of foreigners.

 

 

The Joint Force stressed the need to overcome differences, rally behind the army and the national leadership, and reject all forms of hatred, racism, and regionalism, because the country is in danger.

 

 

The joint force said that what is happening in El-Fashir is not just an attack by the Janjaweed militia, but rather a systematic attempt to bring down Sudan as a state through alliances that turn war into a commodity and the people into its victims.