A UN report released on Thursday accused the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces in Sudan of widespread killings, torture and abductions during a three-day offensive at a displacement camp in April.
At least 1,013 civilians were killed during the attack from April 11 to 13 in Zamzam camp, in what the UN Human Rights Office report describes as βgross abuses of international human rights lawβ.
Of those killed, 319 were summarily executed, either in the camp or as they tried to flee. Some were killed in their homes during house-to-house searches by the RSF. Others were killed in the main market, in schools, health centres and mosques. More than 400,000 inhabitants of the campβs original 500,000 were displaced once again due to the attack.
Zamzam, in North Darfur, western Sudan, is one of the largest internally displaced persons camps in the country.
The harrowing report comes days after an investigation by Lighthouse Reports, conducted in collaboration with CNN, uncovered a campaign of ethnically motivated atrocities carried out by the Sudanese Armed Forces that mainly targeted non-Arab communities.
Both sides in Sudan's civil war are accused of war crimes. Several of their leaders have been sanctioned by the US, the EU and the UN.
Army chief Gen Abdel Fattah Al Burhan, who is sanctioned by the US and accused of allowing his troops to use chemical weapons, has rejected calls for a ceasefire and pledged to keep fighting until the RSF is defeated. His troops have been linked to Islamist-backed figures and influence within Sudanβs security apparatus.
On Wednesday, Massad Boulos, US President Donald Trump's senior adviser for Arab and African affairs, said Washington and Riyadh have agreed on βpractical stepsβ to bring about a humanitarian truce in Sudan.
In the Zamzam report, a community leader recounted how two RSF fighters inserted their rifles through holes in the window of the room where he was hiding with 10 other men and opened fire, βkilling randomly eight of themβ.
Cutting electricity supply
The report also detailed patterns of sexual violence.
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