The paramilitary group Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which was engaged in a two -year war with the Army of Sudan, was fully pushed by the state of Khartoum, indicates the army.
“The state of Khartoum is entirely free from rebels,” the army said in a statement published by the Sudan news agency.
The announcement comes almost two months after the army took over the city of Khartoum – including the presidential palace – of its rivals in a large victory.
Earlier Tuesday, the fighting had broken out between the city groups of the city of Omdurman – which is also in the state of Khartoum and part of the region of the capital.
The army said on Monday that it had launched a “large -scale offensive” to Omdurman, according to the AFP news agency.
The RSF has not yet commented on the last statement of the army.
Khartoum had once been at the heart of the government of Sudan, but the country’s military leaders were forced to move east to the Sudan port after their rivals took control of the region.
Until recently, Port Sudan had been considered relatively safe, but he was at the center of fighting fights when he was attacked in the drone earlier this month, which the army blamed the RSF.
The attacks hit key infrastructure and led to water shortages and worsen Panus breakdowns.
The war also had diplomatic reverberations, with relations in Sudan and the United Arab Emirates (water), after Sudan accused the Nation of the Gulf of supporting the RSF, which it denies.
These accusations continued on Tuesday, Sudan saying that the United Arab Emirates were responsible for an attack on Port Sudan earlier this month, reported the reuters news agency.
The water strongly denied the accusations, describing them as “untreated allegations”.
Since the civil war broke out more than two years ago, thousands of people died and millions of people were moved from their homes – creating the worst humanitarian crisis in the world.
The army and the RSF were accused of war crimes, which they deny.