The Sennar Offensive began with the RSF attacking the village of Jebal Moya in Sennar province. The conflict soon spread to the provincial capital of Singa, where intense fighting erupted.[11]
RSF fighters in pickup trucks mounted with automatic rifles rampaged through Singa, looting houses and shops, and taking over the city's main hospital. The RSF claimed to have seized the military's main facility, the 17th Infantry Division Headquarters, in Singa.
After the RSF captured the state capital Sinjah, it expanded eastward and captured Dinder.[14] The SAF recaptured the Dinder on 4 July 2024 and claimed that the RSF retreated to Sinja.[15] The statement also claimed to have inflicted heavy losses, destroying 7 vehicles, seizing 9 others, killing 170 soldiers, and captured an unknown SAF commander. A video was also shown of RSF fighters on the Dinder Bridge.[16]
On 5 July 2024, the SAF recaptured the city of El-Suki as well, a city 25 miles east of Sennar.[17]
On 20 July 2024,[18] Lieutant General Abdel Rahman Albishi, a RSF commander leading military operations in Sennar and Blue Nile, was killed in an airstrike in Singa;[19] 400 fighters fighting under his command were also killed.[20] Albishi was originally from Bout, Blue Nile State, and from the Rufa'a tribe.[21]
By 5 October 2024, the SAF recaptured Jebel Moya.[22] The SAF renewed an offensive in Dinder on 19 October 2024. The army reportedly captured and destroyed an unknown number of vehicles and also established checkpoints in surrounding villages. [23][24] By 23 October 2024, the SAF recaptured Dinder after a few days of battling for the town.[25][26]
On 20 October 2024, The SAF announced the defection of Abu Aqla Kakil, the RSF's commander in Gezira State.[27]
By 23 October, The Sudanese army seizes Al-Dinder from Rapid Support Forces.[28] Since then, The Sudanese army kept pushing towards Singa the capital of Sennar State. Liberating villages from the brutal RSF control and torture warfare used all against International Law.
On 7 November 2024, the SAF arrested dozens of suspected RSF collaborators and recruits in villages west of Dinder.[29]
In 22 November, The SAF were in the doorsteps of Singa. Heavy fighting can be heard in the outskirts of the city with multiple wounded being reported.
By 23 November, The SAF stormed the city and took main control of the main market, hospitals, and the 17th infantry division headquarters. Heavy celebrations flooded the streets of Singa with many refugees who were prior displaced by the RSF are returning to their homes.[30]
Impact and aftermath
The violence forced about 57,000 people to flee their homes. Those fleeing Singa arrived in Gedaref, Blue Nile, White Nile, and Kassala states. Aid groups in Gedaref, which is already hosting more than 600,000 people, started planning for the arrival of those fleeing Sennar.
The Sennar Offensive has had severe humanitarian consequences, with potential future disruption of large-scale agricultural programs in the nearby provinces of Blue Nile, White Nile, and Jazira.