Sudan’s Rapid Support (RSF) paramilitary forces have committed many crimes against humanity during the siege of Al Fair in the western province of Darfour, a mission said today.
These are above the atrocities committed by both the RSF and their enemy, Sudan’s army, in a wider civil war now in the third year, the Commission said in an report that reinforces earlier findings.
No side responded to requests for comments. Both rejected previous categories by the UN and other rights organizations and accused one another of human rights violations.
“The RSFs have committed further crimes against humanity, including large -scale murders, sexual and gender -based violence, looting and destruction of survival means – sometimes reaching outrage and extinction,” Mohamad’s president said in a statement.
The UN three -member team has been instructed by the UN Human Rights Council to investigate rights violations. He said it was based on its latest report on more than 200 interviews, many of them with survivors of violence as well as video material and observations by civil society organizations.
Hundreds of thousands of people live in a siege in the last stronghold of the Sudanese army in Al Farry, the capital of the state of North Darfour, which is today the line of fire in the conflict.
The 18 -page exhibition entitled “A War of Atrocities” states that the RSFs and their allies have used starvation as a method of war there, depriving civilians from basic products such as food and medicines.
The war broke out in April 2023, when the army and the RSF, which were then partners in the exercise of power, clashed over plans to integrate their forces.
Source :Skai
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