UN Blasts Global Inaction as Sudan's El Fasher Falls

The United Nations
By Vibhu Mishra

El Fasher has "descended into an even darker hell," senior UN officials warned on Thursday, as the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) militia seized control of the North Darfur capital after a 500-day siege, forcing tens of thousands to flee on foot amid reports of mass executions, rape and starvation.

Briefing ambassadors in the Security Council , the UN's top relief official Tom Fletcher said "women and girls are being raped, people being mutilated and killed - with utter impunity," adding: "We cannot hear the screams, but - as we sit here today - the horror is continuing."

After overrunning the Sudanese Armed Forces' (SAF) last major stronghold in Darfur which had held out for over 500 days, RSF fighters moved house to house, he said, with "credible reports of widespread executions" as civilians attempted to escape.

Nearly 500 patients and their companions were reportedly killed in the Saudi Maternity Hospital, one of numerous health facilities targeted in the fighting.

"Tens of thousands of terrified, starving civilians have fled or are on the move," Mr. Fletcher said. "Those able to flee - the vast majority women, children, and the elderly - face extortion, rape and violence on the perilous journey."

Horror spreads

Assistant Secretary-General for Africa Martha Pobee called the fall of El Fasher "a significant shift in the security dynamics," warning that the implications for Sudan and the wider region are "profound."

Fighting has already intensified in the Kordofan region, where the RSF captured the strategic town of Bara last week.

Drone strikes by both RSF and SAF, she said, are now hitting new targets across Blue Nile, South Kordofan, West Darfur and Khartoum. "The territorial scope of the conflict is broadening," she cautioned.

"The risk of mass atrocities, ethnically targeted violence and further violations of international humanitarian law, including sexual violence, remains alarmingly high," Ms. Pobee told the Council.

"Despite commitments to protect civilians, the reality is that no one is safe in El Fasher. There is no safe passage for civilians to leave the city."

The UN human rights office, OHCHR , has documented mass killings, summary executions, and ethnically motivated reprisals both in El Fasher and Bara. In the latter, at least 50 civilians were killed in recent days, including five Sudanese Red Crescent volunteers, Ms. Pobee said.

History of atrocity in Darfur

"What is unfolding in El Fasher recalls the horrors Darfur was subjected to twenty years ago," Mr. Fletcher said, referring to the atrocities of the early 2000s that shocked the world and eventually led to International Criminal Court indictments.

"But somehow today we are seeing a very different global reaction - one of resignation," he continued. "This is also a crisis of apathy."

"The Sudan crisis is, at its core, a failure of protection, and our responsibility to uphold international law," Mr. Fletcher said. "Atrocities are committed with unashamed expectation of impunity…the world has failed an entire generation."

Descent into all-out war

The conflict in Sudan began in April 2023, when a long-simmering power struggle between the SAF and RSF erupted into open war.

The RSF traces its roots to the Janjaweed militias accused of atrocities in Darfur 20 years ago, while the SAF represents the remnants of long-standing military rule from Khartoum.

Both forces once shared power after the 2019 ouster of former president Omar al-Bashir, but a dispute over integrating the RSF into the national army triggered a nationwide collapse.

What began as a contest for control of the State has since devolved into a brutal struggle marked by ethnic killings, urban siege warfare, mass displacement, and famine conditions across large parts of the country.

Regional spillover and humanitarian collapse

More than four million people have already fled into neighbouring Chad, South Sudan and the Central African Republic, straining humanitarian operations and heightening instability in already fragile border regions.

Inside Sudan, more than 24 million people - over 40 per cent of the population - are food insecure. Tawila, the main destination some 50kms away for those fleeing El Fasher, is already hosting hundreds of thousands displaced by earlier attacks.

"Our teams in Tawila are seeing traumatized people arriving showing shocking signs of malnutrition," Mr. Fletcher said.

'Blood on the sand. Blood on the hands'

Mr. Fletcher said the Council must act "with immediate and robust action" to stop atrocities, ensure safe humanitarian access, and halt flows of weapons fuelling the war.

"I urge colleagues to study the latest satellite imagery of El Fasher; blood on the sand," he told ambassadors. "And I urge colleagues to study the world's continued failure to stop this. Blood on the hands."

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