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Saturday, February 22, 2025

Sudan paramilitaries kill hundreds in White Nile villages

Fighting between Sudan's army and rebel RSF forces continues to spread 21 months into the war Fighting between Sudan’s army and rebel RSF forces continues to spread 21 months into the war

Sudanese rebels have killed hundreds of people in a three-day assault in the southern White Nile state, according to a rights watchdog.

The attacks on villages near the town of al-Gitaina by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) killed more than 200 people, Emergency Lawyers, a group tracking rights violations in the 21-month war between the Sudanese army and the RSF, said on Tuesday.

“Field executions, abductions, forced disappearances and lootings,” were carried out, the group said. Some victims drowned after being shot at while trying to flee across the Nile River, in what Emergency Lawyers branded a “massacre”.

Sudan’s army-aligned Ministry of Foreign Affairs said later the number of victims had “so far reached 433 people, including infants”.

The Paris-based Sudan Tribune reported that RSF forces killed or injured dozens on Monday alone.

A resident quoted by the media described how RSF fighters on motorbikes fanned out, opening fire on people in the streets and inside their homes.

The reported attacks come as Sudan’s government gained ground against the RSF in and around the capital, Khartoum, about 100km (62 miles) north of al-Gitaina.

On Monday, the army claimed to have regained control of the capital’s Abu Hamama neighbourhood and dismantled an RSF checkpoint connecting it with the downtown.

Turkiye’s Anadolu news agency reported that Sudan’s army now controls most areas in southern-central Khartoum.

Plans for rival governments

The RSF and aligned factions have been preparing to sign a charter this week in Nairobi to declare a parallel government in areas under RSF control.

However, the declaration of a “Government of Peace and Unity” was postponed.

Politician Fadlallah Burma Nasir, head of the National Umma Party which is split over whether to participate, said the signing of the charter had been put back to later in the week to allow for a fuller representation from rebel leader Abdelaziz al-Hilu’s SPLM-N.

The SPLM-N is a large military faction that controls wide swaths of the famine-stricken South Kordofan and Blue Nile states and had not previously taken a firm position in the conflict between the army and the RSF.

The RSF maintains control over some parts of the capital, sections of Kordofan and much of the famine-threatened Darfur region.

Sudan has been engulfed in civil strife since April 2023, with forces of army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan battling fighters aligned with his former deputy, RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, widely known as Hemedti.

Both sides have been accused of abuses and war crimes.

The war has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced more than 12 million and created what the International Rescue Committee has called the “biggest humanitarian crisis ever recorded”.

Last week, Sudan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced plans for a transitional government to pave the way for elections and end the war, as it also made strategic advances against RSF forces in the states of Sennar, Gezira and the key city of Umm Ruwaba in North Kordofan.

On Tuesday, the UN Human Rights Office warned in a report that “entrenched impunity” is prompting gross human rights violations and abuse in the country as fighting spreads to new areas.

The office has warned that the civilian death toll continues to rise as hostilities between the rival parties sharply escalate, and in its new report it called for a broader international effort towards accountability and to stem the flow of arms.

“The continued and deliberate attacks on civilians and civilian objects, as well as summary executions, sexual violence and other violations and abuses, underscore the utter failure by both parties to respect the rules and principles of international humanitarian and human rights law,” said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk.

“Some of these acts may amount to war crimes. They must be investigated promptly and independently, with a view to bringing those responsible to justice,” he added.

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