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For almost two years, Emad Mouawad had been repeatedly shuttled from one Sudanese paramilitary-run detention centre to another, terrified each day would be his last.
The 44-year-old Egyptian merchant spent years selling home appliances in neighbouring Sudan before fighters from the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) stormed his Khartoum home in June 2023, taking him and six others into custody.
"They accused us of being Egyptian spies," he told AFP, back home in Kafr Abu Shanab, a quiet village in Egypt's Fayoum governorate southwest of Cairo.
The RSF has accused Egypt of involvement in the war, which Cairo has denied.
"We were just traders, but to them, every Egyptian was a suspect," 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's many detention sites in Khartoum.
It was two months into the RSF's war with the army, and hundreds of thousands of people had already fled to the Egyptian border, seeking safety.
"We couldn't just go and leave our things to be looted," said Mouawad.
"We had debts to pay, we had to guard our cargo at any cost."
'Nothing but skeletons'
In a university building-turned-prison in the Sudanese capital's Riyadh district, Mouawad was confined with eight other Egyptians in a three-by-three-metre (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, "wasn't food," said Ahmed Aziz, another Egyptian trader detained with Mouawad.
"They would bring us hot water mixed with wheat flour. Just sticky, tasteless paste," 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.
"If you were sick, you just waited for death," Aziz said.
According to Mouawad, "people started losing their immunity, they became nothing but skeletons."
"Five -- sometimes more, sometimes fewer -- died every day."
Their bodies were often left to rot in the cells for days, their fellow detainees laying beside them.
And "they didn't wash the bodies", Mouawad said, an important Muslim custom before a dignified burial.
Instead, he heard that the paramilitaries just "dumped them in the desert".
This image grab from a video received as a curtesy of Mohamed Nzar on March 26, 2025, shows Sudan's army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan surrounded by Sudanese soldiers celebrating after retaking the presidential palace in Khartoum from paramilitaries. (AFP Photo)
A picture shows destroyed tank in a southern neighbourhood of Khartoum on March 29, 2025, after the military recaptured the capital. (Photo by AFP)