Civilians in war-torn Khartoum hoped for calm as sporadic artillery fire echoed through the Sudanese capital Tuesday despite a U.S. and Saudi-brokered.
The warring parties in Sudan have agreed to a seven-day cease-fire due to start Monday and sealed it with their signatures for the first time, according to.
Like many Sudanese forced to flee their homes amid raging street battles, Mohamed said that when he finally returned to his flat, he found heavily armed paramilitaries had moved in.
Since the start of the bloody conflict between two rival generals in Sudan, Mohammed had been holed up in his home with his family, amid the din of explosions, until the day the paramilitaries came to dislodge him.