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Rebel group says lone survivor left after landslide wipes out village of 1,000 in Sudan | CBC News

A landslide wiped out a village in Sudan ‘s western region of Darfur, killing an estimated 1,000 people in one of the deadliest natural disasters in the African country’s recent history, a rebel group controlling the area said late Monday.

The tragedy happened Sunday in the village of Tarasin in Central Darfur’s Marrah Mountains after days of heavy rainfall, the Sudan Liberation Movement-Army said in a statement.

“Initial information indicates the death of all village residents, estimated to be more than 1,000 people. Only one person survived,” the statement read.

The village was “completely levelled to the ground,” the group said, appealing to the United Nations and international aid groups for help to recover the bodies.

Abdul Wahid Al Nour, the group’s leader, made an appeal on Tuesday for international help. “The scale and magnitude of the disaster are immense and defy description,” he said.

People gather Monday at an area following a landslide that destroyed the Tarasin village, in the Marra Mountains area of Sudan. (Sudan Liberation Movement/Reuters)

The ruling Sovereign Council in Khartoum mourned “the death of hundreds of innocent residents” in the Marrah Mountains’ landslide. In a statement, it said “all possible capabilities” have been mobilized to support the area.

Footage shared by the Marrah Mountains news outlet showed a flattened area between mountain ranges with a group of people searching the area.

Luca Renda, the UN humanitarian co-ordinator in Sudan, said he was “deeply saddened” by the reported landslide, adding that local sources indicated that “between 300 and 1,000 people may have lost their lives.” He said the UN and its partners were mobilizing to support the impacted communities at the scene.

‘The village and its people disappeared’

Al-Amin Abdallah Abbas, a farmer from Ammo — a cluster of villages that includes Tarasin — said the area has seen weeks of heavy rainfall, with Tarasin among the worst hit. He said tribal and community leaders in nearby areas have mobilized efforts to recover and bury the victims.

“The village and its people disappeared,” he said. “It’s an unprecedented tragedy.”

Mohamed Abdel-Rahman al-Nair, a spokesperson for the Sudan Liberation Movement-Army, told The Associated Press that the village where the landslide took place is remote and accessible only by foot or donkeys.

The village of Tarasin is located in the central Marrah Mountains, a volcanic area with a height of more than 3,000 metres at its summit. A world heritage site, the mountain chain is known for its lower temperature and higher rainfall than surrounding areas, according to UNICEF. It’s located more than 900 kilometres west of the capital city, Khartoum.

Sunday’s landslide was one of the deadliest natural disasters in Sudan’s recent history. Hundreds of people die every year in seasonal rains that run from July to October. Last year’s heavy rainfall caused the collapse of a dam in the eastern Red Sea Province, killing at least 30 people, according to the UN.

A map of Sudan, with the Khartoum capital starred.
The landslide occurred in an area accessible only by foot or animals. (The Associated Press)

Aid groups forced out by violence

The tragedy came as a devastating civil war has engulfed Sudan after tensions between the country’s military and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) exploded into open fighting in April 2023 in the capital, Khartoum, and elsewhere in the country.

Most of the conflict-stricken Darfur region has become mostly inaccessible for the UN and aid groups, given crippling restrictions and fighting between Sudan’s military and the RSF.

Aid group Doctors Without Borders has warned that multiple communities in Darfur, including the Marrah Mountains, have been cut off after more than two years of war and isolation, describing these areas as “a black hole” in Sudan’s humanitarian response.

It said in a July report that people in these communities have been “deprived from adequate assistance and snubbed by aid actors despite enduring horrid conditions.”

LISTEN | Mary Lupul of Save the Children on Sudan’s humanitarian crisis: 

Day 6Two years into a civil war, Sudan faces an unprecedented humanitarian crisis

One in three Sudanese have been forced to flee their homes — that’s more than 12.6 million people displaced since fighting began. And over six and a half million are children. Aid groups say this is now the largest child displacement crisis in the world — and one of the most underreported. Mary Lupul, Save the Children’s humanitarian lead in Sudan, tells us what this means for people on the ground.

The Sudan Liberation Movement-Army, centred in the Marrah Mountains area, is one of multiple rebel groups active in the Darfur and Kordofan regions. It hasn’t taken sides in the war.

The Marrah Mountains are a rugged volcanic chain extending for 160 kilometres southwest of el-Fasher, an epicentre of fighting between the military and the RSF. The area has turned into a hub for displaced families fleeing fighting in and around el-Fasher.

The conflict in Sudan has killed more than 40,000 people, forced more than 14 million to flee their homes and left some families eating grass in a desperate attempt to survive as famine swept parts of the country.

It has been marked by atrocities, including ethnically motivated killing and rape, according to the United Nations and rights groups. The International Criminal Court said it was investigating alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The conflict created the world’s largest humanitarian crisis, with more than 30 million of the country’s 50 million population needing assistance. Of those, over 630,000 live in famine-stricken areas in Darfur and Kordofan regions, according to the international hunger experts.

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