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ICC finds war crimes being committed in Darfur

Publish date: 14 July 2025
Issue Number: 1134
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: General

There are ‘reasonable grounds’ to believe war crimes and crimes against humanity are being committed in western Sudan, the International Criminal Court (ICC) told the UN Security Council last week. Targeted sexual violence against women and girls of specific ethnicities was named as one of the most disturbing findings to emerge from the ICC probe on crimes committed in Darfur, reports BBC News. War broke out between the Sudanese army and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in April 2023, leading to what the UN calls ‘devastating civilian casualties’. ICC Deputy Prosecutor Nazhat Shameem Khan said it was ‘difficult to find appropriate words to describe the depth of suffering’ in the region. The UN Security Council gave the ICC a mandate to investigate and prosecute crimes in Darfur two decades ago, with the body opening multiple investigations into war crimes and genocide committed in the region from July 2002 onwards. The ICC launched a fresh probe in 2023 after civil war broke out across the country, interviewing victims who had fled the most recent conflict to neighbouring Chad. Khan described an ‘inescapable pattern of offending’, and stressed that the team was working to translate such crimes into evidence for the court. Allegations of war crimes have persisted throughout the past two years, and in January 2025 the US determined that the RSF and allied militias had committed a genocide. The RSF has denied the claims. UN reports indicate that conditions in Darfur have continued to worsen, with hospitals and humanitarian convoys suffering targeted attacks, and food and water deliberately withheld.

Full BBC News report

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