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AFRICE correspondent, BBC NEWS
Women in the kitchen of the community in the besieged Sudanese city of El Fasher are sitting in a despair.
“Our children die before their eyes,” one of them BBC says.
“We don’t know what to do. They are innocent. They have nothing to do with the army or (its paramilitary competitor) fast support forces. Our suffering is worse than what you can imagine.”
The food is so little in EL-Fasher that the prices took off to the fact that the money previously accounted for the purchase that were in a week can now buy only one. International assistance organizations condemned the “calculated use of hunger as weapons of war”.
The BBC has received rare people who are still trapped in the city, sent to us by local activists and filmed by the FRILEST operator.
The Sudanese Army has been fighting the Fast Support Forces (RSF) for more than two years after their commanders jointly arranged and then fell out.
El Fasher, in the Western Darfur region, is one of the most stringent lines in the conflict.

The hunger crisis worsens the burst of cholera that sweeps through the unhappy camps of those One of the most intense RSF attacks on the city so far.
Paramiliters strengthened their 14-month blockade after the loss of control over Khartum’s capital earlier this year and strengthened their battle for El Fasher, the last securing the armed forces in Darfur.
In the north and centers of the country, where the army fought back with the RSF, food and medical care began to make a dent in civil suffering.
But the situation is desperate in the conflicts of Western and South Sudan.
At the end of last month, the Matbakh-AL-HHAIR municipal cuisine Matbakh-AL-HHAIR volunteers turned the ambassador into porridge. This is the remnant of peanuts after oil extraction, usually served by animals.
Sometimes you can find sorghum or millet, but on the day the shooting head of the kitchen says: “There is no flour and bread.”
“Now we have reached the point of view of Ambaz. May God save us from this catastrophe, there is nothing left in the market,” he adds.
The UN has strengthened its call for a humanitarian pause to allow food escorts to the city, and this week, Sudan Sheldon, his Messenger, demanded that the warring parties fulfill their obligations on international rights.
The army provided the registration of trucks, but the UN is still waiting for an official word from a paramilitary group.
RSF advisers have said they believe that the truce would be used to facilitate the delivery of food and ammunition to the “Oblast militias” of the army inside El Fasher.
They also claimed that the paramilitary group and its allies created “safe routes” to leave the city.
Local respondents in El Fasher can get some emergency cash using the digital banking system, but it does not go very far.
“The prices in the markets have exploded,” says Matildo Wu, the Norwegian Refugee Council propaganda manager.
“Today, $ 5,000 (3680 pounds) covers one meal for 1500 people in one day. Three months ago, the same amount can feed them for a whole week.”
Doctors say People die from malnutrition. It is impossible to find out how much – one report in which the regional health official quotes more than 60 last week.
Hospitals cannot cope. Few people still work. They were damaged by shelling and lacking medical materials to help both the starving and the victims of the constant bombing.
“We have a lot of malnutable children who went to the hospital, but unfortunately there is no package (therapeutic food),” says D -Ibrahim Abdullah Hater, a pediatrician at the Al -Saudi Hospital, noting that five strongly malnutritions are now in the ward.
“They just wait for their death,” he says.
When hunger, those who usually die at first are the most vulnerable, least healthy or those who suffer from existing conditions.
“The situation is so unhappy, it is so catastrophic,” the doctor says in a voice message.
“The children of El Fasher die daily due to lack of food, lack of medicine. Unfortunately, the international community is just watching.”
International non -governmental organizations operating in Sudan made a statement This week they say that “sustainable attacks, obstacles and orientation to critical infrastructure demonstrate a deliberate strategy of violations of civilians through famine, fear and exhaustion.”
They said that “anecdotal reports of recent food for military use are added to civilians.”
“There is no safe passage from the city, and the roads are blocked, and those who try to flee, to address the attacks, taxation at the checkpoints, discrimination and death on the basis of society,” the organizations said.
Hundreds of thousands of people have fled in recent months, many of the Zamzm camp moved to the edge of El Fasher, confiscated by the RSF in April.
They arrive in Tavila, a city of 60 km (37 miles) west of the city, weak and dehydrated, with Accounts about violence and extortion along the road from allied RSF groups.
Life in crowded camps is safer, but they are pursued by the disease – the most deadly of all: cholera.
This is caused by contaminated water and killed hundreds in Sudan caused by the destruction of water infrastructure and lack of food and medical care, and has deteriorated from the rainy season.

Unlike El-Fasher, Tawila’s assistance workers have at least access, but their supplies are limited, says John Joseph Ochiebi, a project coordinator at a place called “International Medical Action”.
“We have a deficit (detergent) in terms of medical facilities to be able to fight this situation,” he says. “We mobilize resources to find out how best we can answer.”
It is estimated that there are only three liters of water per person in camps, which, he said, has only three liters of water per person a day, which, he said, “makes people from contaminated sources.”
Zubaida Ismail Iskak lies at the tent clinic. She is seven months pregnant, wave and exhausted. Her story is a fairy tale about the injury told by many.
She tells us that she had previously traded when she had a little money before leaving El Fasher.
Her husband was captured by armed men on the way to Tavila. She has her daughter’s head injury.
Zubayda and her mother went down with cholera shortly after arriving at the camp.
“We drink water, do not boil it,” she says. “We have no one to get us water. I have nothing left since I come here.”
Returning to El -Fasher, we hear the appeals for the help of women who go to the soup -any help.
“We are exhausted. We want this siege to rise,” says Faiz Abar Mohammed. “Even if they spend food, we are completely exhausted.”

Getty Images/BBC