ICC prosecutor warns Sudan’s paramilitary forces may be committing war crimes in Darfur
- On Monday, Massad Boulos said the US is working with the Sudanese army and RSF to secure a humanitarian truce, with an announcement 'soon' after almost ten days of negotiations.
 - After two and a half years of fighting, the prolonged war between the Sudanese army and the RSF has caused severe hunger and displaced millions across Sudan.
 - Reports from el-Fasher describe shocking local violence, including RSF fighters committing house-to-house killings and sexual assault during a rampage last week after an 18-month siege, while the WHO says gunmen killed at least 460 people at a hospital and abducted medical staff.
 - A global hunger monitor on Monday confirmed famine in el-Fasher and Kadugli, while photographs show displaced Sudanese crowding food camps on Sunday, November 2, 2025.
 - Earlier this month the International Criminal Court secured its first Darfur conviction after decades, and its chief prosecutor told the UN Security Council there are grounds to allege war crimes by both sides.
 
63 Articles
63 Articles
Satellite images show the extent of the killing and violence that took place in the Sudanese city of Fashir, which was captured by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF). They show mountains of corpses left in the city, the Yale University Humanitarian Research Laboratory confirmed. Among the corpses, some of which are only bones, are abandoned wounded.
The United States seeks a humanitarian truce in Sudan | Midday News Bulletin 4 November 2025
The United States seeks a humanitarian truce in Sudan, Liberal Senator Jane Hume says the party's policy on Net Zero must be decided soon, Tributes for French cyclist Charles Coste who has died aged 101.
The prosecutors are preparing for a possible prosecution and are collecting evidence of suspected crimes.
The atrocities committed in El Fasher, Sudan, could constitute war crimes and crimes against humanity, says the ICC Prosecutor's Office.
Thousands targeted in 'killing fields' around Sudanese city in paramilitary group's hands
A Sky News joint investigation with Sudan War Monitor and Lighthouse Reports reveals the harrowing fate of civilians and soldiers who fled Al Fashir in the hours after senior commanders and officers left the infantry division.
Only 70,000 of Al-Fashir's 260,000 inhabitants have been able to flee so far. Those who are still there threaten to become victims of mass executions by the RSF forces.
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