Key findings
- On 4 May 2026, strikes allegedly hit Khartoum. CIR geolocated three videos filmed near the airport showing a smoke plume further north in the background.
- CIR was unable to verify damage to infrastructure in the area around and to the north of the airport based on satellite imagery analysis.
- The SAF alleged UAE-procured drones were staged from Bahir Dar Airport in Ethiopia, presenting flight data from a drone recovered on 17 March 2026 as evidence.
- Ethiopia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has formally denied the SAF’s allegations, instead accusing the SAF of deploying TPLF mercenaries in the conflict.
- CIR cannot corroborate the SAF’s specific claim that drones were housed at Bahir Dar Airport from satellite imagery. While increased activity at Bahir Dar has been observed since November 2025, this is assessed as more likely linked to broader ENDF activity.
Strikes north of the airport
On 4 May 2026, strikes hit Khartoum, with CIR geolocating three videos three videos filmed near the airport showing a smoke plume further north in the background.
The three geolocated videos corroborate a single origin area for the smoke (figure 1):
- The first video, shared to a pro-Rapid Support Forces (RSF) Telegram channel, filmed from a moving vehicle, was geolocated to the northern end of Ebed Khatim Street, running parallel to the eastern side of the main runway, approximately 2km southeast of the SAF General Command Headquarters.
- A second video, shared by a pro-RSF account on X, shows the same plume filmed from the corner of Ebed Khatim Street and Omak Street, approximately 750 metres south of the first geolocation point.
- A third video, posted to X by a pro-SAF journalist, was geolocated to the African Petroleum station at the southwestern corner of the airport.
Despite the visible smoke plume, CIR was unable to verify damage to infrastructure in the area around and to the north of the airport based on satellite imagery analysis.
