War Crimes in Civil War-Ravaged Sudan
"[I am] deeply alarmed [by reports of civilian casualties and forced displacement from El-Fasher].""With fighters pushing further into the city and escape routes cut off, hundreds of thousands of civilians are trapped and terrified — shelled, starving and without access to food, health care or safety.""[There is a dire need for an] immediate ceasefire [throughout the region].""[The UN has life-saving supplies ready, but due to the intensified attacks in the region, it has made it impossible for workers to get aid in].""Safe, rapid and unimpeded humanitarian access must be allowed to reach all civilians in need."Tom Fletcher, emergency relief co-ordinator, United Nations"Our liberation of [El Fasher] is the liberation of Sudan, all the way to Port Sudan....""We are coming and we are coming heavy.""The new Sudan goes forward, the old Sudan gets destroyed."RSF second-in-command Abdelrahim Dagalo"[The Rapid Support Forces [RSF] committed heinous crimes against innocent civilians in the city of El-Fasher, where more than 2,000 unarmed citizens were executed and killed on October 26 and 27, most of them women, children and the elderly."Joint Forces, allies of the Sudanese military
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| Camp for displaced families who fled from al-Fashir to Tawila, North Darfur, Sudan. Photograph: Mohammed Jamal/Reuters |
Sudanese army chief General Abdel Fattah al Burham stated his forces had withdrawn from El-Fasher "to a safer location".
In so doing, he acknowledged that his defense operations had lost the
battle for the strategic city, leaving the Rapid Support Forces now in
full control of all of Darfur. Even so, he made a pledge to continue to
fight "until this land is purified".
Despite which, analysts conclude that Sudan has now been partitioned
along an east-west axis. The RSF has set up a parallel government from a
territory that will prove extremely difficult for the military to
extract them.
This
is a bloody civil war, with the RSF, formerly in partnership with the
Sudanese army, since April of 2023 challenging the Sudanese government
for total control of Darfur. Formerly known as the Janjaweed, horsed
Arab militia in conjunction with the previous government of Omar
al-Bashir who was found by the ICC to have been guilty of war crimes in
Darfur, the power struggle between the two forces led to their violent
separation and the challenge that followed. Since then, over 150,000
people have been killed, with over 14 million displaced in the
fighting.
"The shelling was so intense on Saturday that we had no choice but to flee El-Fashir.""Along the way, the RSF filmed us and we were beaten and insulted - and they stole what we had on the journey.""A number of people were captured and ransoms were demanded for their release. Some of those who were taken were later executed.""During the journey, many people were arrested, and we suffered greatly from hunger and thirst."Displaced Darfurian
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| People arriving in Tawila have been describing the extreme violence they faced as they fled el-Fasher. AFP/Getty Images |
Ethnically-motivated
atrocities in the western Sudanese city of El-Fasher have been reported
since it fell to the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, concluding the
years-long siege that made life an utter misery for those city dwellers
who were unable to flee, with the city surrounded by RSF forces. Over 18
months of siege warfare had created fear and threats of starvation for
those forced to remain in the city, trapping 260,000 people without
external aid being able to reach them.
The
Rapid Support Forces now has control over every state capital in the
sprawling Darfur region comprised of mostly non-Arab, Black farming
communities. NGOs, along with local groups had given warning that mass
atrocities would be triggered by El-Fasher's fall to the RSF and those
predictions are ringing true. Open-source intelligence and satellite
imagery have confirmed the dire state of affairs now reigning for the
residents of the city.
According to Volker Turk, UN rights chief, there is a growing risk of "ethnically motivated violations and atrocities", as his office was "receiving multiple, alarming reports that the Rapid Support Forces are carrying out atrocities, including summary executions". According to pro-democracy activists, El-Fasher residents endured "the worst forms of violence and ethnic cleansing" since control of the area was claimed by the RSF.
A
fighter known for executing civilians in RSF-controlled areas was shown
in a video released by local activists shooting a group of unarmed
civilians seated on the ground. They were killed at point-blank range.
As many as 15,000 civilians from non-Arab groups in the West Darfur
capital of El Geneina have been reported to be killed by the
paramilitaries, with their track record of atrocities. The Sudanese army
itself has also been accused of war crimes.
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| The paramilitary RSF Forces have taken over el-Fasher prompting fears of the lives of thousands of civilians Image: UNICEF/Xinhua/IMAGO |
El-Fasher
was considered to represent one of he grimmest places in war-torn Sudan
-- thanks to a war labelled by the UN as among the world's worst
humanitarian crises. Located outside the city, displacement camps were
declared to be in famine. Within El-Fasher, the quarter-million
population in desperation turned to eating animal feed to stay alive.
"[The city] appears to be in a systematic and intentional process of ethnic cleansing of Fur, Zaghawa, and Berti indigenous non-Arab communities through forced displacement and summary execution.""[This includes what appears to be] door-to-door clearance operations."Yale University Humanitarian Research Lab
"[The crisis is] the final stage of the Darfur genocide.""I have seen videos of ditches and trenches entirely full of friends, neighbours and family members’ bodies.""There have been reports of entire families hanging from trees."Emi Mahmoud, Darfur Internally Displaced People Network
Labels: Atrocities, Crisis in Darfur, Rapid Support Forces, Sudanese Civil War, Sudanese Military




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