**
“Our Job Is Only Killing”: A Village’s Nightmare
A fighter from Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF) reportedly uttered a bone-chilling phrase that now haunts Wad al-Noura: “Our job is only killing.”
This week, those words became a horrifying reality.
The Wad al-Noura Massacre: What Happened?
On Wednesday, RSF fighters stormed the quiet farming village in Gezira state—once a refuge from Sudan’s war—in two deadly waves. Eyewitnesses describe armed vehicles and motorcycles rolling in before fighters unleashed machine-gun fire and artillery on civilians.
Men, women, and children were gunned down in streets and homes. Local activists estimate 100–150 dead, with mass burial images circulating online.
Why Did the RSF Attack?
The RSF claims Wad al-Noura harbored rival Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) fighters. But survivors and rights groups call this a pretext for collective punishment—a pattern in the RSF’s brutal scorched-earth tactics.
The RSF’s Dark Legacy: From Janjaweed to Modern Terror
The RSF isn’t a conventional army. It evolved from the Janjaweed, the militia behind Darfur’s genocide. Its leader, General “Hemedti” Dagalo, once commanded these “devils on horseback.” Today, the RSF wages war not for ideology—but for control of Sudan itself.
A War on Civilians: Gezira State Under Siege
Gezira, Sudan’s breadbasket, was a sanctuary for displaced families fleeing Khartoum. Now, RSF advances have turned it into a killing zone. Their tactics—starvation, sexual violence, and massacres—reveal a war against Sudanese civilians.
Global Silence as Sudan Bleeds
While Gaza and Ukraine dominate headlines, Sudan’s crisis goes ignored. The Wad al-Noura massacre is a plea for attention—and justice. As one survivor said: “The world watches, but no one sees us.”
**
