Wednesday, February 26, 2025 - At least 46 people have been confirmed dead following a Sudanese military aircraft crash in the city of Omdurman, officials said Wednesday, February 26.
The Antonov aircraft, which went down on Tuesday, February 25, in
a populated district, also left at least 10 people injured, according to the
government-run Khartoum Media Office. The initial death toll of 19 was revised
upward by the health ministry.
The military stated that the plane crashed while taking off from Wadi
Sayidna air base, located north of Omdurman, a sister city of the capital,
Khartoum. The crash damaged several homes in the Karrari district, the media
office reported.
While the military confirmed that both armed forces personnel and
civilians were among the victims, it did not provide specific figures or
details on the cause of the crash. The health ministry stated that some of the
victims' bodies had been transported to Nau Hospital in Omdurman.
Local reports suggested the aircraft was en route to Port Sudan, the
seat of the military-backed government, when it crashed over the Al-Thawra
neighbourhood in Karrari. Residents reported loud explosions, with thick smoke
and dust filling the sky over Omdurman.
The Sudan Tribune reported that the aircraft was carrying high-ranking
military officers, though this has not been confirmed by the military.
Aircraft crashes are not uncommon in Sudan due to the country's poor
aviation safety record. In 2020, at least 16 people died when a military
Antonov An-12 crashed in the western Darfur region. In 2003, a Sudan Airways
civilian plane crashed into a hillside while attempting an emergency landing,
killing 116 people, with only one survivor.
Sudan remains in the grip of civil war, which erupted in 2023 between
the military and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF). The conflict has devastated
urban areas and has been marked by mass atrocities, including rape and
ethnically motivated killings, which the United Nations and rights groups have
classified as war crimes and crimes against humanity, particularly in Darfur.
Fighting has escalated in recent months, with the military gaining
ground against the RSF in Khartoum and other regions. On Monday, the RSF
claimed it had downed a military aircraft in Nyala, the capital of South Darfur
province.
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