 Dahlia Abdel-Muhman fled her home in Khatum to the safety of the city of Port-Souden, but now she's worried about hundreds or thousands of Sudanese left behind in the capital and elsewhere. Abdel-Muhman, a 47-year-old woman, foresees a bleak future in the coming months in Sudan. She blames the international community for what she perceives a failure to provide much-need aid for the Sudanese people left in conflict heat areas as well as the countries evacuate citizens and diplomats. It's going to be another crisis that no one has envisioned and no one knows how to deal with it. And I think the international community missed a golden opportunity when they evacuated the foreign nationals that they could have gotten in some supplies, anything to tie things over. They didn't. So we are left with no security, no hope that these two men will actually cease all clashes or cease all fighting, and we have no food security. So we're basically left to fend for ourselves with nothing. The negotiators, they put us in this situation because they refused to listen to us Sudanese when we kept telling them, do not negotiate with these two entities, especially the RSF. You cannot make a paramilitary group. You cannot recognize them. You can't give them legitimacy. And that's what they did. And Hemiti will not stop until he gets the power that he's seeking. He can say whatever he wants to say about, I want to bring democracy. I'm here for the civilians. No, he's not. He's been killing Sudanese since the days of Omar al-Bashir. He killed them when they were protesting peacefully during the revolution. He's not going to stop now. And the reason why we're in this mess that we're in, it's because politicians and mediators thought they knew better than the Sudanese people. And they left and we're here. Fighting in Sudan east overnight after the army and the rival paramilitary force agreed to a three-day truce, allowing more Sudanese to flee on Tuesday and foreign countries to extract citizens. The warfare that erupted between the army and the rapid support forces paramilitaries on April 15 has turned residential areas into war zones, killing at least 459 people, wounding over 4,000, and caught in water, power, and food in the nation already reliant on aid. So it's going to be another crisis that no one has envisioned and no one knows how to deal with it. And I think the international community missed a golden chance when they evacuated the foreign nationals that they could have gotten in some supplies, anything to tie things over. They didn't. So we are left with no security, no hope that these two men will actually cease all clashes or cease all fighting, and we have no food security. So we're basically left to fend for ourselves with nothing. The negotiators, they put us in this situation because they refused to listen to us Sudanese when we kept telling them, do not negotiate with these two entities, especially the RSF. You cannot make a paramilitary group. You cannot recognize them. You can't give them legitimacy. And that's what they did. And Hemiti will not stop until he gets the power that he's seeking. He can say whatever he wants to say about, I want to bring democracy. I'm here for the civilians. No, he's not. He's been killing Sudanese since the days of Omar al-Bashir. He killed them when they were protesting peacefully during the revolution. He's not going to stop now. And the reason why we're in this mess that we're in, it's because politicians and mediators thought they knew better than the Sudanese people. And they left. Hello. Hope you enjoyed the news. Please do subscribe to our YouTube channel and don't forget to hit the notification button so you get notified about fresh news updates.