Deputy Africa Editor

Nag-edad lang og 19, ALAWIA BABIER AHMMED samtang siya mikalagiw sa nag-agay nga nagdaot nga gubat nga nagdaot sa kasadpang rehiyon sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner ni Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner sa Darner Of Darner of Daright of Darner of Daright by Darner at Darner of Darner Darfur.
“I bleed on the road,” he told the BBC, before rushing to increase that “worse walks in about 70km (45 miles) from the surrounding town of the city.
The air strikes of air and militations after the miscarriage, Alawia said and his family crossed a baby crying for his mother, lying on the side of the road.
Alawia said he took the child and took him with him: “We covered the mother and went on.”
Sudan was broken into a civil war since the fight between the army and the fast-grown support of April 2023, caused by a worst human crises with more than 12 million people forced to flee their homes.
Darfur is a great process, with the RSF who controls most of the region – outside the town of El-Faser who remains in the hands of the army and its allies.
El-Faster arrived under strong bombing as RSF tried to catch it. In April plans noted to make a government warming one built in the army, which extends fear that it could cause Sudan.
Alawia said that while bombing the bombing last month, he was forced and his family flee and walked to the cited, west of El-faster.
His brother Marwan Mohamed Adam, 21, told the BBC attacking him in accordance with the Gangs of the RSF – including my neck, arms around my neck, and robbed some of the assets he brought.
Marwan added that his life was saved simply because he lied to the gangs where he came from.
He said that the attackers took “the” young men who revealed them from El-Fler, so when he was converted to him from Shaqra, a stop on the road to the call.

“You feel the fear, you feel dead,” 21-year-old speaks the BBC, adding that he saw three bodies of the road.
Another woman, Khadija ismail Ali, tells BBC “bodies scattered across the streets”.
He said that 11 members of his family were killed in the prompt of El-Faster, and three children were killed in their four-day journey from the town to the call.
“Children died from the thirst of the way,” says Khadija.
The village of his family, El-Tarkuniya, attacked in September of RSF-alied militias, stealing their crop.
They were far from Zamzam camp of hunger, and then to El-Faser and now to the call.
Medical Charity Aliman said gunmen took the land and farms in many families in the village attacks.
Severe malnutrition, especially for children who have reached to the call, reached an alarming level, plus it.
Alawia said his brother dropped the little food they took as air strikes and prompting that they met through Shaqra.
“These are leftovers beans with little salt we brought to our hands to feed the children,” he said.

Without food or water, they met a woman who told them they could find water in the nearby village.
The family went out after midnight for the village, but they didn’t know they were walking in an RSF fighters controlled.
“We greeted them, but they were not answered. They ordered us to sit on the earth and examined our possessions,” Alawia recalls.
The warriors took 20,000 pounds in Sudanese ($ 33; £ 24) that still in all family, with the clothes and shoes they brought.
“My shoes are not good, but they bring it,” Alawia said.
He added that the RSF Gunmen refused to give them water, so they all pressed until they reached the village of El-Koweim. There, they saw a good guarded with PRSF fighters.
“We asked for the water for orphan, but they refused,” said Alawia, added that he tried to continue the well, but beaten men.
Thousands and tired, the family continued to walk until the cited arrest, where Alawia said he was crushed and hasted at the hospital.
Depreciated him after being treated. Marwan was also treated for wounds that he had been gossaved during the beat.
Alawia said they were looking for relatives in the baby they were saved, and after finding some of them, handed over to the child.
The alawia and his family lived today, where a family welcomed them home.
“Life is OK, thank God, but we worry about the future,” Alawia told BBC.
Marwan said he wanted to go abroad to keep her education and start a new life.
This is something that has been done in millions of Sudanese, because their lives are broken in a war with no indication.

Many BBC stories in Sudan Battle:
