Survivors bare mass killings in Sudan
Fresh satellite images from Friday showed ‘no large-scale movement,’ giving them reason to believe much of the population may be ‘dead, captured, or in hiding.’
Fresh satellite images from Friday showed ‘no large-scale movement,’ giving them reason to believe much of the population may be ‘dead, captured, or in hiding.’

Photo courtesy of Mohammed Jamal/Reuters
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PORT SUDAN (AFP) — Satellite imagery suggests mass killings are likely continuing in and around Sudan’s El-Fasher, Yale researchers said, as Germany’s top diplomat on Saturday described the situation there as “apocalyptic.”
At war with the regular army since April 2023, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) seized El-Fasher on Sunday, pushing the military out of its last stronghold in the western Darfur region after a grinding 18-month siege.
Since the city’s fall, reports have emerged of summary executions, sexual violence, attacks on aid workers, looting and abductions, while communications remain largely cut off.
Survivors from El-Fasher who reached the nearby town of Tawila have told Agence France-Presse of mass killings, children shot before their parents, and civilians beaten and robbed as they fled.
Hayat, a mother of five who fled the city, said that “young men travelling with us were stopped” along the way by paramilitaries and “we don’t know what happened to them.”
Yale University’s Humanitarian Research Lab said fresh satellite images from Friday showed “no large-scale movement,” giving them reason to believe much of the population may be “dead, captured, or in hiding.”
The lab identified at least 31 clusters of objects consistent with human bodies between Monday and Friday, across neighborhoods, university grounds and military sites.
“Indicators that mass killing is continuing are clearly visible,” the lab said.
The United Nations says more than 65,000 people have fled El-Fasher but tens of thousands remain trapped. Around 260,000 people were in the city before the RSF’s final assault.
At a conference in Bahrain on Saturday, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said Sudan was “absolutely an apocalyptic situation, the greatest humanitarian crisis of the world.”
He added that the RSF had “pledged to protect civilians and they will be held accountable for these actions.”
‘Truly horrifying’
Speaking at the same event, British Foreign Minister Yvette Cooper also described the reported abuses as “truly horrifying.”
“Atrocities, mass executions, starvation and the devastating use of rape as a weapon of war, with women and children bearing the brunt of the largest humanitarian crisis in the 21st century,” she said.
The RSF said Thursday that it had arrested several fighters accused of abuses during the capture of El-Fasher, and the paramilitary group’s chief Mohamed Hamdan Daglo pledged accountability for “anyone who has made a mistake.”

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