World

Sudan’s paramilitary investigated over ‘war crimes’ as tens of thousands flee

International Criminal Court prosecutors announced that they are preserving evidence from Sudan’s Darfur region of potential war crimes undertaken by a paramilitary force, after they reportedly killed hundreds of people and seized a key government stronghold.

In a statement, the prosecutors office said that the court “is taking immediate steps regarding the alleged crimes in el-Fasher to preserve and collect relevant evidence for its use in future prosecutions.”

The alleged atrocities “are part of a broader pattern of violence that has afflicted the entire Darfur region” and they “may constitute war crimes and crimes against humanity,” the statement said.

The Rapid Support Forces, a powerful paramilitary group, captured the key city of el-Fashir last week after besieging it for 18 months.

More than 70,000 people have fled el-Fashir so far, and survivors have told Reuters about the separation and killing of men who left the Darfur city for safety.

Experts have said the reported violence bears the hallmarks of previous episodes in Darfur that were widely labelled as genocide. The fate of almost 200,000 people thought to be trapped in the city remains unknown.

Witnesses have reported fighters going house to house, killing civilians and committing sexual assaults. According to the World Health Organization, groups of gunmen killed at least 460 people at a hospital and abducted doctors and nurses.

Many details of the hospital attack and other violence in the city have been slow to emerge, and the total death toll remains unclear.

The fall of el-Fasher heralds a new phase of the brutal, two-year war between the RSF and the military in Africa’s third-largest country.

The head of the Red Cross says history is repeating itself in Sudan’s Darfur region after reports of mass killings during the fall of the city of el-Fashir to the Rapid Support Forces paramilitary last week.

The RSF’s capture of el-Fashir, the Sudanese army’s last holdout in Darfur, marked a milestone in Sudan’s civil war, giving the paramilitary force de facto control of more than a quarter of the country’s territory.

Hundreds of civilians and unarmed fighters may have been killed during the city’s fall, the U.N. human rights office said on Friday. Witnesses have described RSF fighters separating men from women and children, with gunshots ringing out afterwards. The RSF denies harming civilians.

The situation in Sudan is “horrific,” International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) President Mirjana Spoljaric told Reuters in a weekend interview during a visit to Riyadh.

She said tens of thousands of people had fled el-Fashir after the RSF seized the city and it was likely that tens of thousands more were trapped there without access to food, water or medical assistance.

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