Daily Dispatch

Sudan's warring sides commit abuses, UN report says

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Both sides in Sudan’s civil war have committed abuses that may amount to war crimes including indiscrimi­nate attacks on civilian sites like hospitals, markets and even camps for the displaced, the UN human rights office said on Friday.

Efforts have so far failed to end the 10-month-old conflict that pits Sudan’s regular armed forces and the paramilita­ry Rapid Support Forces (RSF). Thousands of people have been killed and some eight million forced to flee their homes, making it the country with the largest displaced population in the world.

“Some of these violations would amount to war crimes,” Volker Turk, the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights, said in a statement accompanyi­ng the report.

Separate from the report, which investigat­es incidents through to December, Turk’s office said on Friday that it had reviewed “credible” though unconfirme­d video evidence appearing to show soldiers in army uniform parading with the decapitate­d heads of perceived RSF supporters while chanting ethnic slurs.

Sudan’s army said the footage was “shocking” and that it would investigat­e.

A UN rights spokespers­on said Turk’s office would follow up with Sudanese authoritie­s on the progress of the investigat­ion.

Both sides have said they would investigat­e reports of killings and abuses and prosecute any fighters found to be involved.

The UN report is based on interviews with over 300 victims and witnesses as well as footage and satellite imagery.

It says that sometimes those fleeing for their lives or displaced by the violence became victims of explosive weapons attacks.

In one incident, dozens of displaced people were killed when their camp in Zalingei, Darfur was shelled by RSF between September 14-17, the report said.

Some 26 civilians, mostly women and children, were killed on August 22 by shells reportedly fired by the Sudanese Armed Forces while sheltering under a bridge.

The report also says the RSF had adopted a military strategy of using human shields, citing testimonie­s of victims involved.

It describes incidents in the capital Khartoum where dozens of individual­s were arrested and placed outside near RSF military posts to deter air strikes from Sudanese fighter jets.

UN investigat­ors have so far documented cases of sexual violence affecting 118 people, including one women who was detained and repeatedly gang-raped for weeks. Many of the rapes were committed by RSF members, the report said.

Reuters has also documented cases of gang rape in ethnically targeted attacks by RSF forces and allied Arab militia.

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