A recent report by UN-backed human rights experts has highlighted what they describe as a campaign resembling genocide carried out by Sudanese paramilitary forces against non-Arab communities near El Fasher in Darfur last October. The Rapid Support Forces (RSF) allegedly committed mass killings and other atrocities, targeting non-Arab groups such as the Zaghawa and the Fur after an 18-month siege. Reports indicate that several thousand civilians lost their lives during the RSF’s capture of El Fasher, with only 40% of the city’s population managing to escape the violence.
The conflict in Sudan escalated in mid-April 2023, resulting in over 40,000 deaths according to UN estimates, although aid organizations suggest the actual toll may be significantly higher. The RSF’s offensive in El Fasher involved widespread violence, including mass killings, sexual assaults, torture, and ransom abductions, as reported by the UN Human Rights Office.
The fact-finding mission identified at least three criteria for genocide in the RSF’s actions, including ethnically targeted killings, sexual violence, and deliberate efforts to physically destroy non-Arab communities. The team emphasized that these were not random acts of war but organized operations with genocidal characteristics. Survivors recounted chilling statements by RSF fighters expressing intent to eliminate certain ethnic groups.
Calls for accountability have been made by the fact-finding team, stressing the urgent need to protect civilians as the conflict spreads to other regions in Sudan. The RSF, which emerged from the Janjaweed militias responsible for atrocities in the early 2000s, has faced allegations of receiving support from the United Arab Emirates, a claim the U.A.E. denies. Sudan’s former leader, Omar al-Bashir, remains wanted by the International Criminal Court for crimes committed during the Darfur conflict.
The global community has been urged to take action to prevent further atrocities in Sudan, with reports indicating a dire humanitarian crisis affecting millions of people. The situation in Darfur underscores the critical need for international intervention to address the ongoing violence and ensure the protection of vulnerable populations.
