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Aid chief says UN wants to enter Sudan’s al-Fashir after reported crimes and atrocities

aid-chief-says-un-wants-to-enter-sudan’s-al-fashir-after-reported-crimes-and-atrocities
Aid chief says UN wants to enter Sudan’s al-Fashir after reported crimes and atrocities

N’DJAMENA, Nov 19 (Reuters) – The United Nations is pushing to gain access to al-Fashir, the famine-stricken city in Darfur where witnesses have reported mass reprisals since a takeover by Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces last month, U.N. aid chief Tom Fletcher said.

Fletcher told Reuters it would be a huge task to provide aid to the city, which would be treated as a “crime scene” for investigations following reports of systematic executions, detentions, and rapes.

Many of those thought to have remained in al-Fashir when the paramilitary RSF took control following a long siege are still unaccounted for.

Tom Fletcher, UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, speaks during an interview.

U.N. aid chief Tom Fletcher said the organization wants access to the city of al-Fashir, where reports have been made of systematic executions, detentions, and rapes. REUTERS

Children sit in a displacement camp in Al-Dabbah, Sudan.

Children sit in a displacement camp in Al-Dabbah, Sudan, on November 13. REUTERS

Safe passage was needed for humanitarians to enter the city and for survivors to leave, Fletcher said in an interview late on Tuesday from N’Djamena in Chad, following a visit to Darfur.

Fletcher said talks with the RSF were “super delicate” but he hoped the U.N. would gain access in days or weeks, not months. “We will put in the hard work to get in,” he said.

ATROCITIES ‘ON A HORRIFIC SCALE’

Al-Fashir’s fall on October 26 has cemented the RSF’s control of the Darfur region in its 2-1/2-year war with the Sudanese army. The city has been cut off from communications since the RSF offensive.

“There have been mass atrocities, mass executions, mass torture, sexual violence on a horrific scale,” Fletcher said. “This is a city that has been under siege for so long, they’ll need food, water, medicine.”

“There’s a massive job ahead of us,” he added.

Rapid Support Forces paramilitary members amid dead bodies and burning vehicles near al-Fashir, Sudan.

“There have been mass atrocities, mass executions, mass torture, sexual violence on a horrific scale,” Fletcher said. “This is a city that has been under siege for so long, they’ll need food, water, medicine.” via REUTERS

The RSF says reports of atrocities have been exaggerated but that it was investigating cases of abuses by its soldiers. The International Criminal Court has said it is collecting evidence of alleged mass killings and rapes in al-Fashir.

Though more than 100,000 people are thought to have fled al-Fashir since the RSF takeover, only a fraction of those have reached the nearby town of Tawila, controlled by neutral forces.

Most of the rest are thought to be in inaccessible villages around al-Fashir.

Sudanese women who fled intense fighting in Al-Fashir sit inside a makeshift tent at a displacement camp in Al Dabba.

Sudanese women who fled intense fighting in al-Fashir sit in a tent. REUTERS

Displaced girls waiting in line for aid at a displacement camp in Al-Dabbah, Sudan.

More than 100,000 people are thought to have fled al-Fashir since the RSF takeover REUTERS

Injured displaced Sudanese people receiving treatment in a makeshift clinic run by Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) in Tawila.

Injured displaced Sudanese people who fled al-Fashir receive treatment at a makeshift clinic in Tawila, North Darfur, Sudan on November 3. REUTERS

PUSH FOR FULL ACCESS

Fletcher, who visited Tawila, where an estimated half a million displaced people were already sheltering, described the 350km (217 mile) journey from there to the border with Chad as “utterly perilous”.

Few people had the resources to get through an estimated 30-40 checkpoints along the route, “which is why it’s so urgent that we get the full authority to operate at scale inside Sudan — inside Darfur, Tawila, and in al-Fashir,” he said.

Fletcher said aid deliveries would be contingent on the RSF providing safe passage for U.N. convoys as well as fleeing civilians, and providing accountability for fighters who have committed atrocities.

The U.N. aid chief also said he held talks with Sudan’s army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan last week in Port Sudan for full access to the country. The Sudanese army has placed bureaucratic roadblocks to such access in the past.

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