Sudanese Rapid Support Forces soldiers stand on a vehicle during a rally in southern Khartoum. AP
Sudanese Rapid Support Forces soldiers stand on a vehicle during a rally in southern Khartoum. AP
Sudanese Rapid Support Forces soldiers stand on a vehicle during a rally in southern Khartoum. AP
Sudanese Rapid Support Forces soldiers stand on a vehicle during a rally in southern Khartoum. AP

UN human rights chief condemns ethnically motivated attacks in Sudan


Adla Massoud
  • English
  • Arabic

The UN's human rights chief on Tuesday condemned ethnically motivated attacks perpetrated by Sudan's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces and allied militias in the West Darfur region, warning the conflict between two rival generals has “broken the nation”.

Volker Turk, High Commissioner for Human Rights, said hundreds of “non-Arab” civilians, primarily from Masalit communities, had been killed in such attacks.

These “developments echo a horrific past that must not be repeated”, he said. At least 300,000 people were killed in the Darfur war in the early 2000s.

Addressing the Human Rights Council in Geneva, Mr Turk said the latest attacks had occurred mainly in the region's capital, El Geneina, but also in at least eight other locations.

The RSF now control all but two localities and there were “worrying signs” of the involvement of militias often affiliated along tribal or ethnic lines, he added.

The rival Sudanese military is meanwhile conducting mobilisation campaigns that pose a “real risk” of sparking intercommunal tension and triggering further conflict, Mr Turk said.

The continuing conflict “has broken a nation”, he added.

According to the UN, the war in Sudan has uprooted more than five million people, including one million who have sought refuge in neighbouring states.

The country has seen an “epidemic of conflict-related sexual violence”, Mr Turk said. He added that his office had received credible reports of at least 45 incidents involving at least 95 victims, including 75 women, one man and 19 children.

“This is likely to be the tip of the iceberg. Reports are mainly coming from Khartoum State, and the Darfur and Kordofan regions. The majority of perpetrators – around 78 per cent – have been men in RSF uniform or armed men affiliated with the RSF,” he asserted.

He called for accountability for abuses committed by both sides, including “widespread arbitrary detention”.

“Hundreds – and likely thousands – are being held incommunicado in appalling conditions,” Mr Turk said.

Despite repeated promises by both sides to investigate the serious human rights abuses, “the silence has been deafening, with nobody held to account”.

US President Joe Biden’s top envoy to the UN, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, who last week visited the town of Adre in Chad on the border with Sudan, told reporters in a phone briefing on Tuesday that there is “no question” that the two generals are “fighting for power and the people of Sudan are suffering because of that fight”.

“We have said very clearly to parties across the region that they should not support either side in this really unconscionable war,” she said.

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UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
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Manchester United 1 (Van de Beek 80') Crystal Palace 3 (Townsend 7', Zaha pen 74' & 85')

Man of the match Wilfried Zaha (Crystal Palace)

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets

Guns N’ Roses’s last gig before Abu Dhabi was in Hong Kong on November 21. We were there – and here’s what they played, and in what order. You were warned.

  • It’s So Easy
  • Mr Brownstone
  • Chinese Democracy
  • Welcome to the Jungle
  • Double Talkin’ Jive
  • Better
  • Estranged
  • Live and Let Die (Wings cover)
  • Slither (Velvet Revolver cover)
  • Rocket Queen
  • You Could Be Mine
  • Shadow of Your Love
  • Attitude (Misfits cover)
  • Civil War
  • Coma
  • Love Theme from The Godfather (movie cover)
  • Sweet Child O’ Mine
  • Wichita Lineman (Jimmy Webb cover)
  • Wish You Were Here (instrumental Pink Floyd cover)
  • November Rain
  • Black Hole Sun (Soundgarden cover)
  • Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door (Bob Dylan cover)
  • Nightrain

Encore:

  • Patience
  • Don’t Cry
  • The Seeker (The Who cover)
  • Paradise City
UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
End of free parking

- paid-for parking will be rolled across Abu Dhabi island on August 18

- drivers will have three working weeks leeway before fines are issued

- areas that are currently free to park - around Sheikh Zayed Bridge, Maqta Bridge, Mussaffah Bridge and the Corniche - will now require a ticket

- villa residents will need a permit to park outside their home. One vehicle is Dh800 and a second is Dh1,200. 

- The penalty for failing to pay for a ticket after 10 minutes will be Dh200

- Parking on a patch of sand will incur a fine of Dh300

Updated: September 12, 2023, 6:17 PM`