Red Cross head says ‘history repeating’ in Sudan after reported killings

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A general view of people sitting at a camp for displaced families who fled from al-Fashir to Tawila, North Darfur, Sudan, October 27, 2025. REUTERS/Mohammed Jamal

People at a camp for families who fled from El-Fasher on Oct 27 after the city fell to paramilitary forces last week.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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The head of the Red Cross says history is repeating itself in Sudan’s Darfur region after

reports of mass killings

during the fall of El-Fasher city to the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitary last week.

The RSF’s capture of El-Fasher – the Sudanese army’s last holdout in Darfur – marked a milestone in Sudan’s civil war, giving the paramilitary force de facto control of over a quarter of the country’s territory.

Hundreds of civilians and unarmed fighters may have been killed during the city’s fall, the UN human rights office said on Oct 31. Witnesses have described RSF fighters separating men from women and children, with gunshots ringing out afterwards. The RSF denies harming civilians.

The situation in Sudan is “horrific”, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) president Mirjana Spoljaric told Reuters in a weekend interview during a visit to Riyadh.

She said tens of thousands of people fled El-Fasher after the RSF seized the city, and it was likely that tens of thousands more were trapped there without access to food, water or medical assistance.

“It’s history repeating, and it becomes worse every time a place is taken over by the other party,” she said.

A crackdown on Darfur rebels in the 2000s led to years of ethnically driven violence that killed hundreds of thousands in what was widely labelled a genocide. The RSF has its roots in the “Janjaweed” militias mobilised by the government at the time.

Ms Spoljaric also said the ICRC was “extremely concerned” about reports of a suspected massacre at the Saudi Hospital, the last-known functioning medical facility in El-Fasher, although it could not yet substantiate what happened there.

ICRC staff in the nearby town of Tawila heard reports that people fleeing were “sometimes collapsing and even dying out of exhaustion or because of their wounds”, Ms Spoljaric said, calling the situation “absolutely beyond what we can consider acceptable”.

The US has said the RSF has committed genocide in the Darfur city of Geneina during an earlier stage of the 2½-year civil war, which the group denies.

Rights groups and US officials have also accused the RSF and allied militias of ethnic cleansing in the region.

Appeal for restraint

Asked about her messaging to alleged foreign backers of parties to the conflict, Ms Spoljaric said: “Especially those states that have an influence on parties to conflict are under responsibility to do the necessary to restrain them and to make sure that they protect civilian populations.”

The United Arab Emirates has been accused of sending the RSF substantial military support but has repeatedly denied doing so.

The rival Port Sudan-based authorities have foreign backers, including Egypt, and deployed Iranian-made drones to try to turn the tide of the conflict in 2024.

More than 70,000 people have fled El-Fasher since Oct 26, according to the International Organisation for Migration, but little is known about the fate of almost 200,000 others thought to have remained there during the 18-month RSF assault and siege of the city.

Ms Spoljaric said the world is living through a “decade of war”, with armed conflicts doubling in the past 15 years to approximately 130, and urged parties to conflicts – from the Gaza Strip to Ukraine – to uphold the rules of war.

She said the proliferation of conflicts is being accelerated by rapidly evolving military technology, particularly drones, which “create an environment where nowhere is safe any more”.

In the lead-up to the RSF’s takeover of El-Fasher, residents told Reuters they were taking refuge in underground bunkers to try to protect themselves from drones and shells after intensifying attacks on displacement shelters, clinics and mosques. REUTERS

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