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BBC News Arabic & BBC News, Port Sudan and London
Mass growth in the water prices is a week for a week in a week of air attacks in Ked Sea Sudan.
Once the Sudan is a relatively relatively safe shelter from the destructive civil war, the Port Sudan is now reconstructed from groups of rapid support forces (RSF).
Smoke from three fuel warehouses that target after six-day drone attacks are still growing. Rescue teams are collected around the destroyed sites, but they fight to put the fires aside.
Between RSF leaders and the army, it has previously created one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises and forced more than 12 million people from their homes.
One of the fugitives in the port of Sudan is a 26-year-old mutasim, who did not want the second name to be published due to security.
BBC talked to him after waiting for hours to return a water dealer.
Vital commodity was scarce. Explosions in fuel warehouses left Port Sudan without diesel used to strengthen the pumps that grow groundwater.
Mutasim told the BBC that a water supply a week ago his 2000 Sudanese pounds ($ 3.30; £ 2.50), now charged 5 times this amount.
He and his family leaves seven people without eating, cleanliness and bathing without water.
“Soon, we will not be able to pay it,” he said, he said he received money from the purchase and sale of key goods in the market.
The water port is not the only problem of Sudan.
Daily life returns to normal, markets and shops are open, but humans have a crowd of cars outside the city’s gas station.
“It can take five hours to get gasoline,” said Mutasim.
This is a situation where many Sudanese are previously faced, but not in this city.
Port Sudan until last week was one of the few places of the country, which is considered to be the worst of the civil war.
“We came here from Omdurman two years ago,” Mutasim referred to the city sitting on the other side of the Nile River from the Charter of the River.
Family costs all deposits – $ 3,000 (£ 2,250) – establishing a new location.
“We had to leave our house by RSF, so it was ease of coming here. Life began to return to normal.”
“It’s not safe here, because it’s not safe here, but so expensive – and where are we going?”
Lives in the dark for the last two weeks made by the latest attacks from Port Sudan.
“My ramed is 70 years old, heating and moisture, because night there is no electricity for fans,” he said.
“We can’t sleep.”
Hawa Mustafa, a teacher of El-Genina in Darfur, took refuge in the west of the country and Sudan.
For more than two years, he lives with four children for the shelters of the IDPs. He said that the attacks of this week “live in fear.”
“Drones came to us and we have returned to the state of war and security.”
“The sounds of the drones and anti-zenith missiles are reminiscent of the first days of war in the el-genine.”
Hawa lives without her husband who could not leave their homes due to the deterioration of the security situation. Now he is in charge of his family.
“If Port is worse in the city of Sudan, I don’t know where to go. I planned to go to one of the neighboring countries, but this dream seems that it will not come true.”
Another man living in the city, Mariam Atta, “Life has changed completely,” BBC.
“We struggle to cope,” he said. “The fear is constantly.”
Sudan’s Civil War has since began in 2023, humanitarian agents depend on the port, port and country as a helper, as a helper, according to the only functional international airport.
The UN has been used to provide food aid by organizations such as World Food Program.
“The port is our main humanitarian center from the water,” says Leni Kinzli, WFP spokesman for Sudan.
“In March, almost 20,000 metric tons of food were distributed, and that’s what I would say more than half of the port of Sudan,” he said.
WFP, 10 regions of the country are currently in 10 areas in the risk of risk, he said.
Many aid agencies have already blocked the help of these attacks, prevented the humanitarian situation even worse.
“I think this is already intended to seriously restrict the delivery of life and medical supplies that risk the risk of worse the critical condition,” he said.
Added that agencies will look for other routes to the country, it will be difficult.
The city is quiet in the night.
Before the attacks, people will gather on the beach, and some will watch football in local cafes. However, electricity darkness has left the city in the dark and the residents choose to stay at home due to security.