Examples of using Hashaba in English and their translations into Russian
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Official
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Colloquial
Hashaba Central.
Umm Sidir, Hashaba North.
Pro-Government militias had then attacked the Hashaba area.
Fighting spread to Sergeila, Hashaba, Umbulula, Fafur, Gamari and Idan.
Potential exploitation of natural resources,such as gold in the Hashaba area.
In Hashaba, the African Union confirmed that Arab tribesmen destroyed a village on 10 November.
Five villages were reportedly destroyed:Aesh Barra, Hashaba, Deta, Tarchana and Gondo.
This operation was followed by a general mine action assessment of approximately 40 km2 around Hashaba.
JEM forces suffered heavy casualties at both Idan and Hashaba, and have not been encountered in the area again.
Accounts from the Hashaba attack allege that MiG aircraft were deployed to bomb the area on the second and third days.
Over the next week fighting spread to Sergeila, Hashaba, Umbulula, Fafur, Gamari and Idan.
An estimated 83,000 internally displaced persons and conflict-affected residents in Tawilla and Tawilla Rural have lost access to medical support, while 200,000 beneficiaries are affected by the indefinite suspension of food distributions in Dar Zaghawa, Umm Baru,Birmaza and Hashaba.
JEM forces suffered heavy casualties at both Idan and Hashaba and 2,000 families fled from the fighting.
During its mandate, the Panel deduced that most of the affected areas in Darfur were located in and around Jebel Marra,Wadi Hawar, Hashaba and Shangil Tobaya.
There are, however,cases in Sigilli and Hashaba where the clashes resulted in attacks on civilians or towns, leading to devastating numbers of casualties.
Other villages attacked during this period included Anka, Hashaba, al-Jirah, Umm Hosh and Birmaza.
Similar fighting has also taken place at Hashaba, most recently in January 2013, again apparently over control of a gold mining area. There have also been, and continue to be, numerous reported incidents of intertribal clashes and some incidents in which former members of Government militias have forcibly expressed their discontent with the current Government, especially against the backdrop of rising inflation and unemployment.
A UNAMID patrol verified the aerial bombing by the Sudanese Armed Forces near Hashaba village, 20 km west of Tawilla, on 27 June.
The unexploded ordnance clearance andmine risk education teams began their operations in the Kutum rural area around Hashaba in Northern Darfur.
Subsequently, on 17 October,a UNAMID fact-finding mission to Hashaba came under attack by unidentified armed assailants firing heavy machine guns, mortars and rocket-propelled guns.
According to community sources, on 21 September, a dispute over land use triggered clashes between Arab nomads andTunjur farmers in Hashaba 56 km north-east of Kutum.
The villages andlocations worst affected by the attacks included Hashaba, Damara, Kiskis, Khabesh, Hila Awin, Agra, Haskanita, Taif and the Hijilija internally displaced persons camp.
African Union(AU) monitors observed major military activity, including joint Government-militia attacks involving looting andburning of villages in Hashaba and Konkono(south Darfur) on 11 and 12 December.
For its part,the mission is continuing its efforts to engage the various armed groups active in Hashaba so that it can return to the area to enhance security for the civilian population and open space for humanitarian assistance.
The same answer was given to the Panel when it raised the question of the most recentinstances of reported aerial bombardments, including the ones that it had investigated, in Hashaba and various parts of eastern Jebel Marra.
During the reporting period, certain areas remained completely cut off from assistance,in particular Hashaba North in Kutum, North Darfur, and the eastern part of the Jebel Marra mountains spanning Central and North Darfur.
Violence against humanitarian personnel continued throughout September. On 1 September,a national stall member of the International Rescue Committee died in Hashaba, Northern Darfur, in crossfire between the NRF and Government forces.
Access to some areas, including parts of Western Darfur,Eastern Jebel Marra in Southern Darfur and Hashaba in Northern Darfur, remained restricted; no interagency mission has been permitted access to Western Jebel Marra since August 2011.
Equally disturbing are reports that elements of SAF were involved in the looting of health facilities in Darfur. On 1 September 2006, SAF soldiers looted the health centre, the pharmacy andthe guesthouse of an international nongovernmental organization in Hashaba North, Northern Darfur after nongovernmental organizations staff were killed in crossfire.
When one woman refused to hand over her blanket, the soldiers assaulted her. On 1 September, SAF soldiers looted the health centre, pharmacy andthe guesthouse of an international non-governmental organization(NGO) in Hashaba North, Northern Darfur, after its staff had been killed in crossfire. On 9 September, SAF soldiers reportedly destroyed relief food in international NGO distribution centres in Sanihaye village, east of Um Sidir.