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Thursday, January 30, 2025
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ICC seeking arrest warrants for those accused of atrocities in Sudan’s West Darfur region

publish time

28/01/2025

publish time

28/01/2025

ICC seeking arrest warrants for those accused of atrocities in Sudan’s West Darfur region
A general view shows a Security Council meeting at the United Nations headquarters on Jan 17. (AP)

UNITED NATIONS, Jan 28, (AP):The prosecutor of the International Criminal Court announced Monday that his office will be seeking arrest warrants for those accused of atrocities in Sudan’s West Darfur region, which has seen reported ethnic cleansing by paramilitary forces that have been fighting government forces for 19 months.

Karim Khan told the UN Security Council that crimes are being committed in Darfur "as we speak and daily” and are being used as a weapon of war. He said that conclusion is the result of "a hard-edged analysis” based on evidence and information collected by his office. Sudan plunged into conflict in mid-April 2023, when long-simmering tensions between its military and paramilitary leaders broke out in the capital, Khartoum, and spread to other regions, including the vast western Darfur region.

Two decades ago, Darfur became synonymous with genocide and war crimes, particularly by the notorious Janjaweed Arab militias, against populations that identify as Central or East African. Up to 300,000 people were killed and 2.7 million were driven from their homes. Khan told the council in January there were grounds to believe both government forces and the paramilitary Rapid Support Force, which was born out of the Janjaweed, may be committing war crimes, crimes against humanity or genocide in Darfur.

The Biden administration, just before it left office this month, determined that the RSF and its proxies are committing genocide in Sudan's civil war. And the ICC prosecutor told the council Monday that there are "very clear echoes” in the current conflict of what happened 20 years ago. "The pattern of crimes, the perpetrators, the parties, tracked very closely with the same protagonists, the same targeted groups as existed in 2003” and led the Security Council to refer Darfur to the ICC, Khan said.

"It’s the same communities, the same groups suffering, a new generation suffering the same hell that has been endured by other generations of Darfuris, and this is tragic.” Human Rights Watch in a major report last May said the Rapid Support Forces and their allied militias carried out attacks against the ethnic Masalit and other non-Arab groups in El Geneina, the capital of West Darfur state, from April to June 2023, with attacks intensifying that November.