A drone attack by a paramilitary group, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), has killed at least 24 people, including eight children, near Er Rahad in Sudan's North Kordofan province. The vehicle carried displaced families fleeing fighting in the Dubeiker area, said the Sudan Doctors Network. Two infants were among the dead. Several others were injured and taken to local hospitals struggling with medical supply shortages. The Sudan Doctors Network called it a “flagrant violation of international humanitarian law” and urged global groups to hold RSF accountable. The RSF has not yet commented. This attack follows another drone strike on Friday targeting a World Food Programme (WFP) aid convoy delivering food to displaced people in North Kordofan. One person died and others were wounded. Women and children are among those going hungry as aid efforts face frequent attacks. UN humanitarian coordinator Denise Brown called these strikes a major threat to aid operations. International condemnation is mounting. US Africa adviser Massad Boulos called for accountability, saying, “Destroying food intended for people in need and killing humanitarian workers is sickening.” British aid minister Jenny Chapman declared the convoy attack “disgraceful” and said aid workers should never be targeted. Saudi Arabia’s foreign ministry also condemned the RSF drone attacks, including strikes on aid convoys, displaced families, and a hospital that killed 22 people. It called on RSF to stop attacking civilians and highlighted reports of nearby countries supplying arms and mercenaries, including allegations against the UAE, which it denies. The conflict between RSF and Sudan’s military has plunged the country into chaos since April 2023, killing over 40,000 people according to the UN, but actual deaths may be higher. Over 14 million people are displaced, with famine spreading and malnutrition worsening. An IPC report warns that acute malnutrition cases will grow in 2026. Mohamed Abdiladif of Save the Children said, “Every day we hear devastating stories of parents selling the last of what they own simply to keep their children alive from one day to the next.” The crisis in Sudan deepens as the war shows no signs of ending.