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'Killed on sight': Sudanese fleeing El-Fasher recall ethnic attacks

Sudanese refugees participate in an awareness-raising session at the Tine transit camp in Chad on November 8, 2025.. With the last army stronghold in Sudan's western Darfur region having fallen to paramilitary forces on October 26, the United Nations expects a mass influx of refugees, but it is unclear how many will actually make it to neighbouring Chad. The Rapid Support Forces (RSF), fighting a brutal war with Sudan's army for more than two years, claimed full control of El-Fasher, having besieged the capital of North Darfur state for nearly 18 months, causing countless thousands of people to flee.

‘Killed on sight’: Sudanese fleeing El-Fasher recall ethnic attacks

AFP by AFP
November 9, 2025
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As he fled the Sudanese city of El-Fasher in terror, Hassan Osman said he saw ethnic attacks by paramilitary forces, with civilians targeted for their tribe and skin colour.

The Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which have been at war with the army since April 2023, captured the last military stronghold in western Darfur on October 26.

Reports of mass killings, ethnic violence, abductions and sexual assaults have since emerged.

AFP spoke to three survivors of the battle for El-Fasher, who are now seeking shelter in the nearby town of Tawila.

Rights organisations have echoed fears that ethnic killings are taking place in areas under the paramilitaries’ control.

An RSF officer rejected the accusations as false.

Osman, a university student from El-Fasher, told AFP that paramilitary fighters singled people out according to their ethnicity.

“They judge you by your tribe, your skin colour and where your family is from,” he said.

“If you belong to certain tribes, they don’t ask any questions, you are killed on sight.”

He said the city’s streets were “filled with bodies” when he escaped. “Some were slaughtered. Some were eaten by dogs.”

Amna Haroun, from the Zaghawa African tribe, said she watched in horror as RSF fighters gunned down her husband and eldest son.

“They killed them right in front of my eyes, saying, ‘We don’t want you here’,” she told AFP.

– ‘Racial insults’ –

The conflict in Sudan has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced nearly 12 million and triggered a hunger crisis.

Both sides have been accused of committing atrocities over the course of the war.

Darfur is home to several non-Arab ethnic groups, including the Zaghawa, Fur, Berti and Masalit, who have long been targeted by Arab militias.

The RSF traces its origins to the Janjaweed, a predominantly Arab militia accused of genocide in Darfur two decades ago.

Between 2003 and 2008, an estimated 300,000 people were killed and nearly 2.7 million were displaced in those campaigns of ethnic violence.

According to the European Union Agency for Asylum, non-Arab or African groups represent between two-thirds and three-quarters of Darfur’s population.

The Zaghawa, the dominant ethnic group in El-Fasher, have been fighting alongside the army since late 2023.

The group, which initially remained neutral when the war began, aligned with the military after the RSF carried out massacres against the Masalit tribe in West Darfur capital El-Geneina, killing up to 15,000 people.

Osman said residents with darker skin, especially Zaghawa civilians, were subjected to “racial insults, humiliation, degradation and physical and psychological violence” as they fled El-Fasher.

“If your skin is light, they might let you go,” he said. “It’s purely ethnic.”

Osman, who is from the Berti tribe, said he himself was not subjected to ethnic violence because the RSF fighters’ main enmity was with the Zaghawa, who are aligned with the army.

But Hussein, from the Fur tribe, said he was detained for several days with around 200 men in Garni, a town 25 kilometres (16 miles) northwest of El-Fasher, where they were beaten and insulted.

“They hit us with sticks and called us ‘slaves’,” Hussein, who asked to be identified only by his first name for fear of reprisal, told AFP.

Osman also said RSF fighters demanded money from civilians — often hundreds of dollars — for safe passage, based on tribal identity and family origin.

“They ask where your family is from and set the amount accordingly,” he said.

– ‘Simply for being black’ –

An RSF officer, based in El-Fasher, who asked not to be named because he was not authorised to speak to the media, denied the reported killings.

“We did not kill civilians or kill anyone because they belong to a (certain) tribe. These are just false accusations,” the officer told AFP.

After the fall of El-Fasher, the paramilitary group issued a directive to its forces instructing them to “adhere strictly to the law, rules of conduct and military discipline during wartime”, emphasising the need to ensure the “protection of civilians”.

Since El-Fasher’s takeover, the United Nations and rights monitors have reported widespread atrocities, including ethnically-driven killings and abductions.

UN experts said Friday they were “appalled by credible reports” of RSF executions of civilians in El-Fasher, calling them war crimes that “may amount to crimes against humanity”.

They said the attacks mirrored earlier RSF campaigns in the nearby Zamzam camp — overrun by paramilitaries in April — and El-Geneina, where thousands were killed, accusing the group of targeting Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa communities “with the intent of terrorising, displacing and destroying them in whole or in part”.

Sylvain Penicaud of MSF, who has been speaking to civilians fleeing El-Fasher in Tawila, told AFP that many of those fleeing said they were “targeted because of the colour of their skin”.

“For me, the most terrifying part was being hunted down while they were running for their lives. Being attacked simply for being black,” Penicaud said.

str-maf/amj

© Agence France-Presse

Tags: conflictelfasherrightssudan
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