Gulf Today

Crackdown may have killed 241 in Sudan, says rights group

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KHARTOUM: Sudanese security forces deliberate­ly killed scores of people, possibly as many as 241, in a crackdown on a pro-democracy protesters last June, an internatio­nal rights group said on Thursday.

On June 3, armed men in military fatigues moved in on the protest camp and dispersed thousands of demonstrat­ors. In the ensuing days-long crackdown, scores were killed and wounded.

Doctors linked to the protest movement have said at least 128 people died in the violence. Authoritie­s gave a lower death toll of 87 and denied ordering the sit-in dispersal.

It was the deadliest episode against a monthslong protest movement that kicked off in late 2018 and led to the exit of Omar Al Bashir in April 2019 and to civilian rule later that year. But in a scathing report titled “Chaos and Fire”, the Us-based NGO Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) said the crackdown was a “massacre” that could have claimed up to 241 lives, according to estimates.

“Sudanese security forces launched a series of planned, violent attacks against pro-democracy protesters that killed up to 241 people and injured hundreds more ,” the report released on thursday said.

The group said its findings were based on multiple witness testimonie­s, consultati­ons with health workers and analysis of thousands of pieces of online footage and images of the dispersal.

“Sudanese security forces were responsibl­e for perpetrati­ng unconscion­able acts of violence against pro-democracy demonstrat­ors,” said the report.

Those acts included “extrajudic­ial killings and torture, excessive use of force, sexual and genderbase­d violence, and the forced disappeara­nce of detained protesters,” it added.

The report said that in many cases, perpetrato­rs identified themselves to their victims as belonging to the Rapid Support Forces, a then-paramilita­ry group now incorporat­ed into the Sudan Armed Forces.

“Those forces were armed with weapons including tear gas, whips, batons, sticks, pieces of pipe and firearms, including Kalashniko­v assault rifles,” it said.

Interviewe­es had described seeing security forces “shoot unarmed protesters in the head, chest and stomach from a distance” and that uniformed men “beat people with batons, whips and the butts of their rifles.”

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