# Amnesty documents RSF crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing in El Fasher
> Report based on 246 interviews and 89 verified videos names three RSF commanders; acts targeting the Zaghawa community 'may be relevant to the crime of genocide'

**Meta:** type: event · date: 2026-07-01 · heads: 戦争はどう終わるのか, 語られていないこと · 6 takes · 3 lenses · 5 regions

## Summary

Amnesty International published "City Under Siege, Children Under Fire" on July 1, a report based on eight months of investigation, 246 interviews (including 39 children), and 89 open-source videos and satellite images documenting [Rsf](/ja/entity/rsf) crimes against humanity in [North Darfur](/ja/entity/north-darfur) from early 2024 through October 2025. The crimes, murder, extermination, rape, sexual slavery, torture, and persecution, targeted non-Arab communities, particularly the Zaghawa. Three RSF commanders are named: Maj. Gen. Gedo Hamdan Ahmed Mohamed, Lt. Col. Abbas Khater Bakhit, and Al-Fateh Abdullah Idris. The report says the documented acts "may be relevant to the crime of genocide" under a parallel investigation. Secretary General Agnes Callamard said it was "a stain on the conscience of humanity." The report was launched in Nairobi, where IGAD mediators have been unable to enforce a ceasefire.

## Why it matters

El Fasher is the last [Sudan War](/ja/entity/sudan-war) flashpoint not yet under RSF control, and the report documents what the SAF withdrawal to Khartoum has left behind. Named commanders are now legally exposed to ICC prosecution under the Rome Statute; Amnesty's evidence base (victim interviews, open-source video, satellite analysis) is sufficiently documented to support an Article 13 Security Council referral, though China and Russia have previously blocked such referrals. The ethnic targeting of the Zaghawa, a community spanning Sudan and Chad, also introduces a cross-border dimension.

## What to watch

- Whether the International Criminal Court opens a formal investigation or request for arrest warrants against the three named RSF commanders.
- The UN Security Council's response and whether a referral motion is tabled.
- SAF recapture of Kulbus in West Darfur (July 1), and whether the territorial shift affects the RSF's siege posture around El Fasher.
- Donor response: whether the US, EU, or UK impose targeted sanctions on the named individuals under their respective Sudan sanctions regimes.

## Regional takes (batched by bias / lens)

### unlabelled
- **Amnesty International** (Global, en) — The primary document: press release accompanying the full report 'City Under Siege, Children Under Fire: Rapid Support Forces' Crimes Against Humanity in North Darfur' (AFR 54/1116/2026). Amnesty says acts documented include murder, extermination, forcible transfer, imprisonment, torture, rape, sexual slavery, enslavement, and persecution, and that they may constitute genocide under parallel investigation. Three commanders are named: Maj. Gen. Gedo Hamdan Ahmed Mohamed ('Abu Shok'), Lt. Col. Abbas Khater Bakhit, and Al-Fateh Abdullah Idris ('Abu Lulu'). Secretary General Agnes Callamard: 'It is a stain on the conscience of humanity.'
  Source: https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2026/07/sudan-rsf-atrocities-in-el-fasher-a-stain-on-the-conscience-of-humanity-new-report/
- **BBC News** (United Kingdom, en) — 
  Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa
- **Darfur24** (Sudan, ar) — 
  Source: https://darfur24.com/
- **The Guardian** (United Kingdom, en) — 
  Source: https://www.theguardian.com/world/sudan

### US liberal editorial; framing emphasises international accountability failure
- **Washington Post** (United States, en) — The Washington Post report contextualises the Amnesty findings alongside the wider humanitarian catastrophe in North Darfur, noting that El Fasher remains the only Darfur state capital not yet taken by the RSF and that 45 people were unlawfully detained, including 8 children, between July 2024 and January 2026. Boys as young as 13 were beaten and held in overcrowded rooms where detainees witnessed hundreds dying of dehydration or disease. The Post emphasises that the international community has not imposed targeted sanctions on the named commanders.
  > "The RSF detained 45 people including 8 children; boys as young as 13 were beaten and denied food, held with hundreds who died of dehydration."
  Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2026/07/01/sudan-rsf-war-crimes-amnesty-fasher-darfur/bf6a904a-7538-11f1-b665-5f8be87f3787_story.html

### Arabic-language; primary Arabic media covering Sudan conflict; emphasis on African Union failure
- **Al Jazeera** (Qatar, ar) — Al Jazeera's Arabic coverage reaches audiences across the Arab world where Sudan coverage is filtered through Gulf diplomatic alignments; the outlet notes that UAE support for the RSF (acknowledged in prior investigations) is conspicuously absent from explicit Amnesty condemnation, and highlights the role of IGAD and the African Union in the mediation failure that allowed the siege of El Fasher to continue. It cites the report's launch in Nairobi as significant given that Kenya chairs the IGAD process.
  > "Report launched in Nairobi; Amnesty names three RSF commanders; Al Jazeera Arabic notes AU mediation failure alongside the documented crimes."
  Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/7/1/amnesty-says-rsf-committed-ethnic-cleansing-in-sudans-el-fasher

## Across the graph
- Related: [[sudan-war]]
- Entities: Sudan War, Rsf, North Darfur, Sudan

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Canonical: https://rbtfl.xyz/ja/n/sudan-rsf-el-fasher-amnesty-jul2