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- Mouawad and Aziz were among several Egyptian traders imprisoned RSF paramilitaties when the Sudan civil war broke out in April 2023
- Along with thousands of other detainees, they were beaten, flogged, electrocuted or forced into backbreaking labor
KAFR ABU SHANAB, Egypt: For almost two years, Emad Mouawad had been repeatedly shuttled from one Sudanese paramilitary-run detention center to another, terrified each day would be his last.
The 44-year-old Egyptian merchant spent years selling home appliances in neighboring Sudan before fighters from the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) stormed his Khartoum home in June 2023, taking him and six others into custody.
鈥淭hey accused us of being Egyptian spies,鈥� he told AFP, back home in Kafr Abu Shanab, a quiet village in Egypt鈥檚 Fayoum governorate southwest of Cairo.
The RSF has accused Egypt of involvement in the war, which Cairo has denied.
鈥淲e were just traders, but to them, every Egyptian was a suspect,鈥� said Mouawad, recalling how his captors searched their phones and home.
They found nothing, but that did not spare the group, who were blindfolded, crammed into a truck and driven to one of the RSF鈥檚 many detention sites in Khartoum.
It was two months into the RSF鈥檚 war with the army, and hundreds of thousands of people had already fled to the Egyptian border, seeking safety.
鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 just go and leave our things to be looted,鈥� said Mouawad.
鈥淲e had debts to pay, we had to guard our cargo at any cost.鈥�
Cell without windows
In a university building-turned-prison in the Sudanese capital鈥檚 Riyadh district, Mouawad was confined with eight other Egyptians in a three-by-three-meter (10-by-10-feet) cell without any windows.
Other cells held anywhere between 20 and 50 detainees, he said, including children as young as six and elderly men, some of them in their 90s.
Food, when it came, 鈥渨asn鈥檛 food,鈥� said Ahmed Aziz, another Egyptian trader detained with Mouawad.
鈥淭hey would bring us hot water mixed with wheat flour. Just sticky, tasteless paste,鈥� Aziz told AFP.
Water was either brackish and polluted from a well, or silt-filled from the Nile.
Disease spread unchecked, and many did not survive.
鈥淚f you were sick, you just waited for death,鈥� Aziz said.
According to Mouawad, 鈥減eople started losing their immunity, they became nothing but skeletons.鈥�
鈥淔ive 鈥� sometimes more, sometimes fewer 鈥� died every day.鈥�
Their bodies were often left to rot in the cells for days, their fellow detainees laying beside them.
And 鈥渢hey didn鈥檛 wash the bodies,鈥� Mouawad said, an important Muslim custom before a dignified burial.
Instead, he heard that the paramilitaries just 鈥渄umped them in the desert.鈥�
Living nightmare
Mouawad and Aziz were among tens of thousands vanished into prisons run by both the RSF and the rival Sudanese army, according to a UN report issued earlier this month.
Since the war began in April 2023, activists have documented the detention and torture of frontline aid workers, human rights defenders and random civilians.
The UN report said the RSF has turned residential buildings, police stations and schools into secret prisons.
Often snatched off the streets, detainees were beaten, flogged, electrocuted or forced into backbreaking labor.
The army has also been accused of torture, including severe beatings and electric shocks.
Neither the army nor the RSF responded to AFP requests for comment.
Soba, an infamous RSF prison in southern Khartoum, may have held more than 6,000 detainees by mid-2024, the UN said.
Aziz, who was held there for a month, described a living nightmare.
鈥淭here were no toilets, just buckets inside the cell that would sit there all day,鈥� he said.
鈥淵ou couldn鈥檛 go two weeks without falling sick,鈥� Aziz added, with rampant fevers spreading fear of cholera and malaria.
At night, swarms of insects crawled over the prisoners.
鈥淭here was nothing that made you feel human,鈥� said Aziz.
Mohamed Shaaban, another Egyptian trader, said RSF guards at Soba routinely insulted and beat them with hoses, sticks and whips.
鈥淭hey stripped us naked as the day we were born,鈥� Shabaan, 43, told AFP.
鈥淭hen they beat us, insulted and degraded us.鈥�
RSF war crimes
Both the RSF and the army have been accused of war crimes, including torturing civilians.
Mohamed Osman, a Sudanese researcher at Human Rights Watch, said that while 鈥渢he army at least has a legal framework in place,鈥� the RSF 鈥渙perates with complete impunity.鈥�
The paramilitary force 鈥渞uns secret facilities where people are taken and often never seen again,鈥� Osman told AFP.
Despite their ordeals, Mouawad, Aziz and Shaaban were among the luckier ones, being released after 20 months in what they believe was a joint intelligence operation between Egypt and Sudan鈥檚 army-aligned authorities.
Finally back home in Egypt, they are struggling to recover, both physically and mentally, 鈥渂ut we have to try to turn the page and move on,鈥� said Shaaban.
鈥淲e have to try and forget.鈥�