Most of the victims were civilians, including 14 women who were doing their usual shopping.
Both sides recently said they would resume negotiations in Saudi Arabia, but the humanitarian situation worsened with new attacks by the so-called Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which appear to have launched an offensive.
In this context, RSF reported on the occupation of three military bases in Darfur and the airport in West Kordofan province.
They also announced the capture of the city of Nyala, the capital of West Darfur.
The army, for its part, has not commented on the matter.
The war in Sudan has already claimed almost nine thousand lives, most of them civilians, and around seven million displaced within the country itself or who have sought refuge with neighbors, particularly in Egypt and Chad.
The clashes broke out on April 15 due to contradictions in the middle of an integration process of the Rapid Support Forces led by Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, vice president of the Sovereign Transition Council (CST), within the armed forces and chief of the armed forces and president of the CST, Abdelfata al Burhan.
Both with the rank of general, they are fighting for control of the country after the overthrow of President Omar al Bashir in 2019.
mem/fvt