Satellite images suggest mass burials after RSF seize Sudanese city


The latest satellite images taken over two sites in El Fasher over the past week offer evidence of mass trench and kettle-pit graves being dug and later covered – at a mosque just north of the Saudi hospital, where some 460 people were reportedly killed, and beside a former children’s hospital that the RSF had been using as a prison, the Yale researchers said.

“This activity appears consistent with RSF conducting clean-up of their alleged mass atrocities,” the Yale lab said in its latest report. “It is not possible based on the dimensions of a potential mass grave to indicate the number of bodies that may be interred; this is because those conducting body disposal often layer bodies on top of each other.”

International Criminal Court prosecutors said on Monday they were collecting evidence of alleged mass killings and rapes in the city, but the scope of the overall violence in El Fasher remains unclear because communications are poor in the region.

And as it’s likely bodies are now being buried, that also makes any full accounting of the city’s seizure that much more difficult, particularly as investigators would need to dig the bodies up in an area now held by the warring party that allegedly committed the atrocities.

“The crimes that are being committed are so horrendous,” United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on Tuesday, warning the war in Sudan was “spiralling out of control” and calling for “mechanisms of accountability” over what had taken place in El Fasher.

The White House said earlier this week that it was working with other nations to end the conflict. Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said Australia was horrified by the reports of mass killings and sexual violence and and would commit an extra $10 million in humanitarian assistance.

“We condemn the atrocities committed by the Rapid Support Forces and call for an immediate end to the violence and unhindered humanitarian access,” she said.

Initial satellite images analysed by the lab and the Associated Press last week showed white objects on the grounds of the Saudi hospital and near the former children’s hospital, immediately after the RSF’s seizure of the city. The Yale lab identified those objects as likely to be corpses, with blood stains able to be seen from space.

The RSF has denied killing anyone at the Saudi hospital, but testimonies from those fleeing El Fasher, online videos and satellite images offer an apocalyptic version of the attack.

Satellite images last week of an earthen berm built to the north of El Fasher this year to cut off the city and trap its residents also showed white objects similar to corpses lying on the ground, alongside burnt-out vehicles.

That area corresponds to footage online showing dozens of corpses and RSF fighters moving through the area, firing and talking to those wounded in the attack. Some of those killed appeared to be armed combatants. The Yale lab said in its report on Wednesday that new satellite images suggest some of the corpses from that attack had also been taken away.

In an initial report last week, the Yale lab said its worst fears had been realised, and it had been trying for months to warn of what was going to happen in El Fasher.

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“The nations of the world might be able to say that they could not have stopped it, but they cannot reasonably say that they did not know,” the authors said, adding it appeared the city was now trapped in a “systematic and intentional process of ethnic cleansing” of non-Arab people. The RSF are predominantly ethnically Arab.

The war between the RSF and the military began in April 2023. More than 40,000 people have been killed, according to UN figures, but aid groups say the true death toll could be many times higher.

El Fasher was the Sudanese army’s last holdout in Darfur and its capture marks a milestone in the civil war, giving the RSF de facto control of more than a quarter of the territory.

AP, Reuters


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