-
Steelers' Watt 'excited' to return after lung injury
-
Lens move four points clear of PSG at top of Ligue 1
-
Tesla loses EV crown to China's BYD in 2025 as sales slip
-
Sparklers blamed for deadly Swiss bar fire
-
Frank confident he can win over disgruntled Spurs fans
-
Yemen separatists launch two-year independence transition as strikes kill 20
-
6.5-magnitude quake shakes Mexico City and beach resort
-
Tech campaigner decries US 'punishment' after visa sanctions
-
Swiss send dozens injured in bar fire abroad for treatment
-
Stokes urges England to stick with McCullum despite Ashes defeat
-
Yemen separatists announce two-year independence transition in shock move
-
USA Olympic squad of NHL stars heavy on Four Nations talent
-
Milei eases tax evasion rules to draw out 'mattress dollars'
-
France hooker Mauvaka returns after eight-month layoff
-
Nigeria police charge fatal Joshua crash driver with dangerous driving
-
Russia scores highest Ukraine gains since first year of war
-
Guardiola reaffirms City contract as Maresca speculation builds
-
Iran's protests: What we know
-
2025 was UK's hottest and sunniest year on record
-
Strasbourg's Rosenior coy on Chelsea speculation
-
Swiss bar blaze suspicions fall on sparklers waved by staff
-
US woman killed in rare suspected mountain lion attack
-
Slot admits Liverpool's season has been 'constant battle'
-
Spurs forward Johnson completes Palace switch
-
Endrick absent from Lyon year opener but 'adapting well': coach
-
Ukraine says 19 wounded in Russian strike on Kharkiv housing area
-
6.5-magnitude quake shakes Mexico City
-
Tesla sales slip as it loses EV crown to China's BYD in 2025
-
UK sees record-high electricity from renewables in 2025: study
-
Budanov: Enigmatic spy chief set to become Zelensky's top aide
-
Greece and Argentina make winning starts at United Cup
-
Agonizing wait as Switzerland works to ID New Year's fire victims
-
Nortje gets nod for South Africa's T20 World Cup campaign
-
Arteta urges Arsenal to break New Year Premier League curse
-
Norway closes in on objective of 100% electric car sales
-
Dani Alves invests in Portuguese third division club
-
London stocks hit record as 2026 kicks off with global gains
-
Trump says US will 'come to their rescue' if Iran kills protesters
-
Orsted files lawsuit against US suspension of wind turbine leases
-
South Koreans now free to read North's newspaper, once banned as seditious
-
Stocks make bright start to 2026
-
Bashir, Potts in England squad for final Ashes Test
-
Argentina topple Spain for winning United Cup start
-
Champions Narvaez and Ruegg to defend Tour Down Under titles
-
'Are they OK?': desperate search for the missing after Swiss fire
-
'Are they OK?': desparate search for the missing after Swiss fire
-
Asia stocks make bright start to 2026
-
Miami and Houston stretch NBA win streaks to four games
-
Swiss investigators rush to identify victims of New Year's fire
-
Bicycle kick king El Kaabi is new AFCON hero for hosts Morocco
Surprise rebel alliance could give Sudan's beleaguered RSF a boost
Sudan's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces have signed a charter paving the way for a parallel government with its allies, including a former foe who analysts say could offer crucial territory, fighters and border access.
Since April 2023, a brutal war between the RSF and the regular army -- represented by the internationally recognised government currently based in Port Sudan -- has killed tens of thousands, uprooted 12 million and visited mass human rights violations upon civilians.
Last month, the former US administration declared that the RSF had committed genocide in the western region of Darfur.
Until last week, the lesser-known third party to the war was Abdelaziz al-Hilu, whose faction of the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North had previously fought both the army and the RSF in the country's south.
In an unexpected turn of events, Hilu appeared in Nairobi last week, and his group was one of the key signatories to an RSF charter for a "government of peace and unity".
If his battle-hardened fighters join forces with the RSF, analysts say it could significantly bolster the weakened paramilitaries, led by Mohamed Hamdan Daglo (widely known as Hemeti).
After weeks of losses as the army charges through the country, the new rebel alliance could also grant key border access to RSF-friendly east African states.
- 'On the back foot' -
The RSF has conquered nearly all of Darfur, but is unable to cement its hold on the region and appears on the verge of losing all of the capital Khartoum to the army.
"Hemeti is on his back foot," Marc Lavergne, a professor at France's University of Tours, told AFP.
"Hilu's professional fighters could give him some very welcome help," said Lavergne, a veteran Sudan expert who has personally known Hilu since he helped broker agreements in the region in the early 2000s.
According to Sudanese journalist and SPLM-N specialist Mostafa Serry, the two groups together command up to "65 percent of Sudan".
Their common interests would be best served by merging "the large military forces and vast areas they control", he told AFP.
Hilu controls much of South Kordofan state from his foothold in the Nuba Mountains, as well as pockets of Blue Nile state bordering Ethiopia.
Together, the two groups have border access to Libya, Chad, the Central African Republic and -- thanks to Hilu -- now South Sudan and Ethiopia.
"All of the countries surrounding Sudan, except Egypt, are in favour of the RSF," Lavergne said, and could serve to bolster the paramilitary group, whose supply lines from Sudan's western border have been compromised in recent months.
- Protector or opportunist? -
Analysts say Hilu, historically no friend of Hemeti's, must have received something in return.
"Presumably Hilu did this, in part, to save areas under his control (from) future violence, to increase aid access to those areas, and to guarantee a future role for himself," Cameron Hudson, senior fellow at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, told AFP.
Famine was officially declared in parts of the Nuba Mountains in December, months after SPLM-N itself said mass starvation was threatening its people, including the estimated 700,000 who have fled to the mountains since the war began.
Aid access has been negligible, though the group controls parts of the border with its ally South Sudan, and an airport only 125 kilometres (77 miles) away from the border.
Yet news of Hilu in Nairobi "surprised and angered many of his supporters, who have suffered direct attacks and deprivation by the RSF", Hudson told AFP.
An "opportunist", according to Hudson, Hilu is committed only to "power and advancement of his own vision".
Sources in Nairobi told AFP that Hilu's key demand was the charter's pledge for a secular Sudan, after decades of fighting against Arab and Islamic hegemony from Khartoum.
The RSF -- itself notorious for ethnic violence -- has branded itself a champion for Sudan's marginalised communities.
But even if Hilu counts the charter as a win, he is unlikely to be wholly convinced by Hemeti's promises.
"The RSF doesn't have real allies, it has accomplices," Lavergne told AFP, explaining that "Hilu could side with Hemeti, but he will certainly not abide by his every whim".
G.P.Martin--AT