The doctors team said that paramilitary soldiers massacred more than 100 civilians.

According to the Doctors Association, in the latest massive allegations, paramilitary forces killed more than 100 civilians in Thursday's attack on a city in southern Sudan. civil war.
The paramilitary fighter jets, known as Rapid Support Force, said Thursday that they attacked the city of Nahud, held by the Sudanese military along the territory connected to the expressway owned by Darfur – the West has become a stronghold for Rapid Support Forces.
Volker Türk, the UN Human Rights Director, said Thursday that in just three weeks, at least 542 civilians were killed in the area.
“Sultan's horror films don't know infinite,” he said in a statement about the war. “My fear is growing in light of the ominous warning of the 'blooded' RSF warning before the looming battle.”
The Sudanese military quickly expelled combatants from the country's capital Khartoum in March. But since then, the paramilitary group has declared its own government in the areas under its control and has imposed a major offensive to capture all Darfur.
The doctor group Sudan Doctor Network said fighters in Rapid Support Forces conducted a “massacre” in Nahud on Thursday night, including 21 children and 15 women. The group said the troops also plundered medical supplies warehouses, markets, pharmacies and hospitals.
The group said on social media that the attack “deprived its last resort of health care and stopped health care for many patients who depended on them.”
The group added that tolls do not include military personnel and are likely to rise.
The Sudanese War Guardian, a group of journalists and researchers tracking the civil war, is now in its third year, and he said the Sudanese military lost the city on Thursday, leaving it without a critical hub to access the rapid support force territory in Darfur.
Sudanese military spokesman Nabil Abdallah denied Nahud fell rapidly in support of the troops and said the troops still control the city.
Thursday's attack was due to the long-term attacks on El Fasher, the last major city in Dafur, while the Sudanese military and Rapid Support Forces face new atrocities.
Last month, aid groups and the United Nations said combatants from Rapid Support Forces killed entire employees of a medical clinic in a famine camp in Darfur, killing hundreds of people and forcing up to 400,000 others to escape the camp.
Despite the rapid withdrawal of the support force from the capital and urging officials like Mr. Türk of the United Nations and others, many diplomats and aid workers believe that the end of the war is far from sight.
The war began with the alliance between the military and the rapid support force in 2023. The announcement of parallel governments by paramilitary groups in the western and southern regions under its control has raised concerns about the long-term division of the vast African countries that have been disastrously divided in Libya since 2011.