
Sudan's RSF kills about 300 people in North Kordofan, rights group says
The statement by Emergency Lawyers late on Monday came as fighting rages between the RSF and the Sudanese army in the western areas of the country.
The two sides have been locked in a civil war since 2023, and the army has taken firm control of the centre and east of the country, while the RSF is trying to consolidate its control of the western regions, including North Kordofan and Darfur.
Emergency Lawyers said the RSF had attacked several villages on Saturday around the city of Bara, which the paramilitary force controls.
In one village, Shag Alnom, more than 200 people were killed in a 'terrible massacre', the group said. The victims were either 'burned inside their homes' or shot. In the neighbouring villages, 38 other civilians were also killed and dozens more have been forcibly disappeared.
The next day, the RSF carried out 'another massacre' in the village of Hilat Hamid, killing at least 46 people, including pregnant women and children, the group added.
'It has been proven that these targeted villages were completely empty of any military objectives, which makes clear the criminal nature of these crimes carried out in complete disregard of international humanitarian law,' Emergency Lawyers said, placing the responsibility with the RSF leadership.
The United Nations' International Organization for Migration (IOM) said on Sunday that intensified fighting in the region forced more than 3,000 people to flee the villages of Shag Alnom and al-Kordi.
Many have sought refuge in the surrounding parts of Bara, according to the UN agency.
The United States and human rights groups have accused the RSF of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide. Its soldiers have carried out a series of violent looting raids in territory it has taken control of across the country.
The RSF leadership says it will bring those found responsible for such acts to justice.
Sudan's civil war has created the world's largest humanitarian crisis, driving more than half the population into hunger and spreading disease, including cholera, across the country.
At least 40,000 people have been killed, while 13 million have been displaced.
The International Criminal Court (ICC) has launched a new probe into war crimes in the western Darfur region, and on Thursday, senior prosecutor Nazhat Shameem Khan told the UN Security Council that her office has 'reasonable grounds to believe that war crimes and crimes against humanity' are being committed there.
Khan said her office has focused its probe on crimes committed in West Darfur, and interviewed victims who have fled to neighbouring Chad.
She said the depth of suffering and the humanitarian crisis in Darfur 'has reached an intolerable state', with famine escalating and hospitals, humanitarian convoys and other civilian infrastructure being targeted.
'People are being deprived of water and food. Rape and sexual violence are being weaponised,' Khan said, adding that abductions for ransom had become 'common practice'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Jazeera
9 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
‘Less than human': Report details Trump immigration detention centre abuses
Detainees at three United States immigration detention centres have reported degrading conditions, including a delay in medical treatment that may be tied to two deaths, according to a human rights report. The investigation published on Monday detailed women held in male facilities, rampant overcrowding and potentially deadly indifference to medical needs at the three facilities in or near Miami, Florida: Krome North Service Processing Center, Broward Transitional Center and the Federal Detention Center. Its authors said the abuses underscore another aspect of the human toll of President Donald Trump's deportation campaign, which has forced many facilities to operate beyond their capacity. In turn, the administration has sought a mad-dash scale-up in deportation infrastructure with new facilities, including the Florida state-erected 'Alligator Alcatraz', spiking their own concerns and condemnation. In a statement accompanying the 92-page report's release, Belkis Wille, the associate crisis and conflict director at Human Rights Watch, which authored the report with Americans for Immigrant Justice and Sanctuary of the South, warned that 'people in immigration detention are being treated as less than human.' 'These are not isolated incidents, but rather the result of a fundamentally broken detention system that is rife with serious abuses,' Wille said. Denial of medical care The report, which relied on current and former inmate testimony, information from family members, lawyers and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency data, detailed a lax approach to medical care at the three facilities, which included denial of treatment and medication. One detainee recounted guards in late April ignoring cries for help as 44-year-old Marie Ange Blaise, a Haitian national, suffered what would prove to be a deadly medical emergency at the Broward Transitional Center. 'We started yelling for help, but the guards ignored us,' the detainee recounted, according to the report. By the time a rescue team came more than half an hour later, 'she was not moving.' The detainee who detailed the death said she was also punished for seeking mental health treatment, adding people were regularly put in solitary confinement for requesting such help. In another instance, the wife of Maksym Chernyak, a 44-year-old Ukrainian man, said her husband's requests in February to see a doctor were repeatedly delayed as he experienced fever, chest pain and other symptoms while in detention at Krome. When he did see a doctor, he was diagnosed with elevated blood pressure, which was not directly treated, according to his wife. When Chernyak later started vomiting, drooling and defecating on himself, a cellmate recounted that guards took 15 to 20 minutes to respond. When they did, they accused Chernyak of taking illicit synthetic drugs, a claim the cellmate, identified only as Carlos, denied. Chernyak was removed on a stretcher, declared brain dead and pronounced dead two days later. Overcrowding and degrading behaviour Across the three facilities, the report detailed rampant overcrowding with detainees at Krome saying they were held in cells that at times exceeded twice their capacity. The crowding led to shortages in bedding, soap and other sanitation products, and some detainees were forced to sleep on the floor. Women were also processed at Krome despite it being a male-only facility. Women held at the centre told the investigators that they were denied showers and forced to use open toilets potentially visible to the male population. 'If the men stood on a chair, they could see right into our room and the toilet,' recounted a woman from Argentina. 'We begged to be allowed to shower, but they said it wasn't possible because it was a male-only facility.' Other alleged abuses include excessive use of force, inadequate access to food, prolonged shackling and exposure to extreme heat and cold. Detainees reported 30 to 40 people crowded into a room meant for six and being forced to use a bucket as a toilet. Harpinder Chauhan, a British entrepreneur who spent months bouncing between facilities after being detained by ICE at a regular immigration appointment in February, recounted one response from detention centre authorities. 'They told us if we kept asking for a toilet that flushed, they would create a problem we wouldn't like,' he said. Violations of international, domestic law All told, the report's authors said the allegations amount to violations of both international law and federal US policies on immigration detention. They said the conditions showed the fallout of Trump's effort to enact mass deportations – a drive itself predicated on the evidenceless claim that immigrant criminality is rampant in the US – despite lacking the proper resources. The number of people held in immigration detention, who are typically undergoing their right to challenge their deportations, has risen steadily since Trump took office on January 20, jumping from 39,238 on January 26 to 56,816 on July 13, according to data compiled by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. On Saturday, The Wall Street Journal reported the Trump administration is seeking to quickly scale up its detention capacity from 40,000 to 100,000 beds by year end, largely by prioritising quick-build tent facilities on military bases and ICE properties. The construction drive comes after Trump signed a tax and spending bill that surges an unprecedented $45bn to new detention centres. Last week, US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the administration would also seek to boost cooperation with states like Florida to open more detention facilities like 'Alligator Alcatraz', whose construction is initially funded not by the federal government but by state taxpayers.


Al Jazeera
9 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Kenyan activist Mwangi charged over deadly antigovernment protests
Kenyan activist Mwangi charged over deadly antigovernment protests NewsFeed Prominent Kenyan activist Boniface Mwangi has been charged over his alleged role in the deadly antigovernment protests in June. Video Duration 02 minutes 24 seconds 02:24 Video Duration 00 minutes 58 seconds 00:58 Video Duration 01 minutes 01 seconds 01:01 Video Duration 00 minutes 36 seconds 00:36 Video Duration 01 minutes 06 seconds 01:06 Video Duration 00 minutes 46 seconds 00:46 Video Duration 01 minutes 18 seconds 01:18


Al Jazeera
13 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Kenya activist gets bail after arrest over illegal possession of ammunition
A prominent Kenyan human rights activist has been freed on bail after he was charged with unlawful possession of ammunition over his alleged role in deadly antigovernment protests in June. Boniface Mwangi was charged by the police on Monday, two days after he was arrested and accused of possessing unused tear gas canisters, a '7.62mm blank round', two mobile phones, a laptop and notebooks. The courtroom was packed with hundreds of activists, some wearing Kenyan flags. 'They have no evidence,' Mwangi told reporters, describing his prosecution as 'a big shame'. His lawyer told Reuters news agency he was grateful to the court for agreeing to release Mwangi on bail. Kenya has been facing mass antigovernment protests across the country since last year – first against tax increases in a finance bill and later to demand the resignation of President William Ruto. Since the protests broke out, police have been accused of human rights abuses, including allegations of government critics and activists being abducted and tortured. Rights groups said more than 100 people have been killed in the protests, which have been harshly suppressed. This month, at least 31 people were killed and more than 100 injured in a government crackdown on a protest. In June, at least 19 people were killed in a similar demonstration against Ruto. Police accused Mwangi, a former photojournalist, of 'facilitating terrorist acts' during the June protests and arrested him on Saturday. The activist denied the charges, saying in a social media post shared by his supporters: 'I am not a terrorist.' His arrest triggered a wave of condemnation online with the hashtag #FreeBonifaceMwangi going viral and rights groups condemning it. The search warrant police used to raid Mwangi's home, which an ally shared with journalists, accused the campaigner of having paid 'goons' to stoke unrest at last month's protests. However, 37 rights organisations and dozens of activists said they have not yet managed to prove that a judge had issued that warrant. Mwangi's arrest on 'unjustified terrorism allegations' represents an abuse of the justice system to crush the opposition, the organisations said in a joint statement. 'What began as targeted persecution of young protesters demanding accountability has metastasized into a full-scale assault on Kenya's democracy,' the groups said. In June last year, Al Jazeera's digital documentary strand Close Up profiled Mwangi during a ferocious police crackdown. He then said his nickname online was the 'People's Watchman' because he was striving to get justice for the families of protesters killed by police. Mwangi, who once ran for parliament on an anti-corruption platform, has been arrested multiple times in Kenya. He was arrested on May 19 this year in Dar-es-Salaam, neighbouring Tanzania's largest city, where he had travelled to support treason-accused Tanzanian opposition leader Tundu Lissu. Both Mwangi and a fellow detainee, award-winning Ugandan activist Agather Atuhaire, accused the Tanzanian police of torturing and sexually abusing them while they were in custody. The pair have brought a case before the East African Court of Justice.