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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Alarm over Sudan 'war crimes' amid calls to end fighting

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GEDAREF: Human Rights Watch on Tuesday called on the International Criminal Court to investigate possible "war crimes" in Sudan's Darfur region where fighting has intensified despite calls for an end to the conflict.


The New York-based group charged that the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and allied Arab groups "summarily executed" at least 28 members of the Massalit ethnic minority when they ransacked and torched much of the town of Misterei in May.


Efforts to broker an end to the violence have continued, and the east African regional bloc IGAD on Monday led a renewed push, calling on the warring parties to "sign an unconditional ceasefire".


The Sudanese army nonetheless boycotted the gathering in Addis Ababa, dampening hopes for an end to the nearly three-month-old conflict with the RSF.


Air strikes again shook the capital Khartoum, residents said on Tuesday as they sheltered from gunfire.


Experts believe army leader Abdel Fattah al Burhan and his former deputy, RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, have opted for a war of attrition and are hoping to extract more concessions at the negotiating table.


US Ambassador John Godfrey, who along with other diplomats was evacuated near the start of the conflict, warned that "a military 'victory' by either of the belligerents in the Sudan conflict would entail unacceptable human cost and damage to the country".


Godfrey called instead for "a negotiated exit from the crisis", which he said "does not -- and cannot -- mean returning to the status quo that existed before April 15".


Before the conflict erupted that day, the two generals had jointly ruled the country following an October putsch that derailed Sudan's fragile transition to civilian rule.


Around 3,000 people have been killed in the violence, according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project.


Godfrey further slammed "irresponsible" calls for continued fighting, pointing to the "horrific deaths by air strike of at least six people" in Khartoum North on Monday and of "at least 22 people on Friday in Omdurman".


US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Molly Phee was due to meet regional and Sudanese officials on Tuesday in Addis Ababa.


IGAD on Monday said it would request the African Union to look into possibly deploying the East Africa Standby Force -- usually tasked with election observer missions -- in Sudan "for the protection of civilians and... humanitarian access".


But such a move would likely face hurdles as the conflict has seen multiple successive ceasefires violated. — AFP


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