Audio By Carbonatix
Devastating attacks on a camp hosting hundreds of thousands of people who had fled Sudan's civil war have continued for a third day, residents have told the BBC.
One person in the Zamzam camp described the situation as "extremely catastrophic" while another said things were "dire".
More than 100 civilians, among them at least 20 children and a medical team, have been killed in a series of assaults that began late last week in Sudan's western Darfur region, the UN has said.
The attacks – on the city of el Fasher and two nearby camps – have been blamed on the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF). It has said reports of atrocities were fabricated.
The camps, Zamzam and Abu Shouk, provide temporary homes to more than 700,000 people, many of whom are facing famine-like conditions.
News of the attacks comes on the eve of the second anniversary of the civil war between the RSF and the army.
The UN's humanitarian co-ordinator in Sudan, Clementine Nkweta-Salami, said she was "appalled and gravely alarmed" by reports of what had happened.
"This represents yet another deadly and unacceptable escalation in a series of brutal attacks on displaced people and aid workers," she added in a statement.
Aid organisation Relief International said nine of its workers "were mercilessly killed including doctors, referral drivers and a team leader" in the attack on Zamzam.
The charity, which said it was the last provider of critical health services in the camp, alleged RSF fighters were to blame.
"We understand that this was a targeted attack on all health infrastructure in the region to prevent access to healthcare for internally displaced people.
"We are horrified that one of our clinics was also part of this attack - along with other health facilities in el-Fasher."
In a statement released on Saturday, the RSF said it was not responsible for attacks on civilians and that scenes of killing in Zamzam were staged to discredit its forces.
Contacting the BBC on Sunday morning, one Zamzam resident who works at a community kitchen providing food for those in the camp, said "a large number of young people" had been killed.
"Those who were working in the community kitchen have been killed, and the doctors who were part of the initiative to reopen the hospital were also killed," Mustafa, 34, said in a WhatsApp audio message.
"My uncle and my cousin were killed. People are wounded, and there is no medicine or hospital to save them - they are dying from bleeding.
"The shelling is still ongoing, and we are expecting more attacks in the morning."
He added that all routes out of the camp were closed and it was "surrounded from all four directions".
Another resident, Wasir, said that "nothing [was] left in Zamzam".
"A large number of civilians have fled, and we are still trying to leave, but we haven't succeeded, all the roads are blocked, and we have children with us.
"Death is everywhere. As I speak to you now from inside the trench, there is shelling happening."
Assessing satellite images, a team of specialists at Yale University in the US said on Friday that "this attack conservatively represents the most significant ground-based attack on Zamzam... since fighting erupted in the el-Fasher area in spring of 2024".
The Yale School of Public Health's Humanitarian Research Lab said it had observed that "arson attacks have burned multiple structures and significant areas of the camp in the center, south, and southeast portions of the camp".
The war - a power struggle between the army and the RSF - has created the world's largest humanitarian crisis, forcing more than 12 million people from their homes and pushing communities into hunger.
It began on 15 April 2023, after the leaders of the army and RSF fell out over the political future of the country.
El-Fasher is the last major town in Darfur under army control and has been under siege by the RSF for a year.

Latest Stories
-
Four remanded over GH¢200K robbery attack in Wenchi
55 minutes -
Kojo Adu Asare expresses gratitude to Kwadwo Twum Boafo, Ato Forson, Julius Debrah, others for support during battle with kidney failure
1 hour -
South Tongu MP supports Dorkploame D.A. Basic School with GH¢16,200 for rehabilitation
1 hour -
Hamas confirms top commander killed in Israeli air strike
1 hour -
Photos: Inside the 2026 JoyNews Impact Makers Awards at Labadi Beach Hotel
1 hour -
Ghana’s Commonwealth Games participation in limbo over gov’t’s reluctance to release funds
1 hour -
Senior IS leader killed in joint operation, US and Nigeria say
2 hours -
Tens of thousands descend on London for rival protests
2 hours -
Trump warns Taiwan against declaring independence, hours after summit with China’s Xi
2 hours -
WHO intensifies response as Ebola outbreak kills dozens in DR Congo
2 hours -
Free speech is being protected under Mahama — SIF CEO rebuts Bawumia’s claims
2 hours -
Nine injured in Sefwi Awaso road crash
2 hours -
Was the IMF Programme derailed? – Facts show 2015 Programme was off-track, not 2023 Programme
2 hours -
Teach your children truth, not comfort – FDA Director shares life lessons on motherhood and survival
2 hours -
Ghana must take control of mining sector, but not through abrupt policy shifts – Kenneth Ashigbey
2 hours