At least 97 civilians have been killed and 365 others injured since hostilities broke out between the Sudanese army and paramilitaries, according to the latest tally by the Sudanese Medical Association. The World Health Organization speaks of 83 dead and 1,126 injured and points out that the situation in hospitals is tragic.

In Khartoum, where the army’s fiercest military conflicts are taking place with the powerful paramilitary organization Rapid Support Forces (DTY), at least 15 Greeks remain trapped inside the Greek Orthodox metropolis without food and basic necessities, while they cannot even approach the windows as bullets rain down.

At the same time, two Greeks are hospitalized in the city’s hospitals after injuries they suffered yesterday when a rocket fell outside the church. The two injured Greeks are awaiting surgery however there are serious shortages of materials such as blades and the shops supplying the hospital are currently closed due to the state of emergency.

The testimonies of the trapped Greeks as well as the Metropolitan of Nubia and all Sudan, Savva, in SKAI are shocking.

“From yesterday until today they are hitting the Metropolis. This is happening for the first time, it has never happened before that they hit a church, hit a place where there is a flag of another state. This is happening for the first time,” said the Metropolitan of Nubia, speaking to SKAI about the dramatic situation that prevails, stressing that “at any moment we can die.”

Meanwhile, by order of the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Nikos Dendias, the crisis management unit of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs was activated. In a statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, it points out that it is in communication with Metropolitan Savvas and asks the Greeks who are in Sudan to observe the maximum possible security measures and to avoid unnecessary movements.

Meanwhile, the WHO highlighted the situation in hospitals in the capital Khartoum, home to around 6 million civilians, overwhelmed by casualties amid heavy hostilities over the weekend, in which armored personnel carriers, artillery and aircraft were used.

Many of the nine hospitals that receive wounded civilians face shortages of blood, transfusion materials and other critical supplies. Water and power outages and a lack of fuel to run the hospitals’ generators make their operation even more difficult. Huge shortages of staff, particularly anesthesiologists, are being reported, the agency pointed out.