UN human rights body holds special session on Sudan after hundreds killed in Darfur’s el-Fasher

UN human rights body holds special session on Sudan after hundreds killed in Darfur’s el-Fasher
Hassan Hamid Hassan, Ambassador of the permanent Representative of Sudan to the United Nations Office at Geneva, delivers his statement during the Human Rights Council Special Session on the Human Rights Situation in and around El Fasher, Sudan, at the European headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland. (AP)
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UN human rights body holds special session on Sudan after hundreds killed in Darfur’s el-Fasher

UN human rights body holds special session on Sudan after hundreds killed in Darfur’s el-Fasher
  • The Human Rights Council was also debating a draft resolution calling on an existing team of independent experts to carry out an urgent inquiry into the killings and other rights violations in the city of el-Fasher by the RSF paramilitary

GENEVA: The UN’s top human rights body was holding a one-day special session Friday to highlight hundreds of killings at a hospital in Sudan’s Darfur region and other atrocities committed last month by paramilitary forces fighting the army.
The Human Rights Council was also debating a draft resolution calling on an existing team of independent experts to carry out an urgent inquiry into the killings and other rights violations in the city of el-Fasher by the Rapid Support Forces paramilitary.
“The atrocities that are unfolding in el-Fasher were foreseen and preventable, but they were not prevented. They constitute the gravest of crimes,” said Volker Türk, the UN human rights chief.
Last month the RSF seized el-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, and rampaged through the Saudi Hospital in the city, killing more than 450 people, according to the World Health Organization. RSF fighters went house to house, killing civilians and committing sexual assaults.
Türk said “none of us should be surprised” by reports, since the RSF took control of the city, of “mass killings of civilians, ethnically targeted executions, sexual violence including gang rape, abductions for ransom, widespread arbitrary detentions, attacks on health facilities, medical staff and humanitarian workers, and other appalling atrocities.”
The military and the RSF, who were former allies, went to war in 2023. WHO says the fighting has killed at least 40,000 people, and the United Nations says another 12 million have been displaced. Aid groups say the true death toll could be many times higher.
The draft resolution, led by several European countries, offered little in the way of strong new language though it requested a fact-finding team that the council has already created to try to identify those responsible for the crimes in el-Fasher and help bring them to account.
“Much of el-Fasher now is a crime scene,” Mona Rishmawi, a member of the team, told the session. She added that since the city fell into the hands of the RSF, her mission has collected “evidence of unspeakable atrocities, deliberate killings, torture, rape, abduction of for ransom, arbitrary detention and enforced disappearances, all at the mass scale.”
“A comprehensive investigation is required to establish the full picture, but what we already know is devastating,” she added.
The council, which is made up of 47 UN member countries, does not have the power to force countries or others to comply, but can shine a spotlight on rights violations and help document them for possible use in places like the International Criminal Court.


Gaza hospital says received 15 Palestinian bodies under ceasefire exchange deal

Updated 4 min 55 sec ago

Gaza hospital says received 15 Palestinian bodies under ceasefire exchange deal

Gaza hospital says received 15 Palestinian bodies under ceasefire exchange deal
KHAN YUNIS: Gaza’s Nasser Hospital in the southern city of Khan Yunis said it received the bodies of 15 Palestinians on Friday as part of the US-brokered ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas.
In a statement, the hospital said that: “15 bodies of Palestinian martyrs arrived at Nasser Medical Complex as part of the thirteenth batch of the body exchange deal, bringing the total number of bodies received to 330 martyrs.”
Under the ceasefire deal, Israel was to turn over the bodies of 15 Palestinians for every deceased Israeli returned.
Israel confirmed overnight that militants had returned the remains of Israeli hostage Meny Godard, killed at age 73 the day of the Hamas-led attacks on Israel on October 7, 2023.
The Israeli military informed Godard’s family that “their loved one has been returned to Israel and that his identification has been completed,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said.
At the start of the truce, which came into effect on October 10, Hamas was holding 20 living hostages and 28 bodies of deceased captives.
It has since released all the living hostages and returned the remains of 25 dead hostages, in line with the ceasefire terms.
In exchange, Israel has released nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners in its custody and returned the bodies of hundreds of dead Palestinians.
Israel has accused Hamas of dragging its feet in returning the bodies of deceased hostages, while the Palestinian group says the process is slow because many are buried beneath Gaza’s rubble after two years of war.