NextFin News - On December 3, 2025, Amnesty International released a comprehensive report accusing the Sudanese paramilitary group, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), of committing war crimes during their large-scale assault on the Zamzam refugee camp in North Darfur earlier this year. The attacks took place between April 11 and 13, 2025, amid the ongoing conflict between RSF and Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), with the RSF seeking to capture el-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur State.
The Zamzam camp, once sheltering up to one million displaced persons fleeing previous Darfur conflicts, saw approximately 400,000 residents forcibly displaced in just days due to relentless bombardment and targeted violence. Amnesty's findings, supported by interviews with 29 survivors and detailed satellite imagery, confirm that RSF forces indiscriminately shelled residential areas, executed civilians including vulnerable populations in homes, clinics, and mosques, took hostages, and systematically destroyed mosques, schools, and healthcare facilities. The RSF denied targeting civilians and alleged the camp was used by opposing forces, but Amnesty underscored a documented pattern of egregious abuse and disregard for international humanitarian law.
RSF’s actions in Zamzam form part of a broader military campaign initiated in mid-2024, culminating in the seizure of el-Fasher in October 2025, indiscriminately harming civilians and provoking severe humanitarian crises in a region already scarred by decades of conflict. The attack's brutality is reminiscent of the Janjaweed militias’ earlier genocidal campaigns in Darfur, from which the RSF originated, with previous reports cited by Amnesty noting widespread killings, sexual violence, and destruction of civilian infrastructure. The current conflict has killed at least 40,000 people and displaced over 14 million nationwide.
Amnesty’s Secretary-General, Agnès Callamard, condemned the assault, urging international bodies to open formal investigations into war crimes and calling for an immediate halt to arms transfers to RSF, particularly criticizing the United Arab Emirates for supplying weapons with a high risk of diversion despite its denial of such support. The organization's assessment emphasizes that ending such violations requires expanding arms embargoes to encompass all armed factions across Sudan, including both RSF and SAF.
The humanitarian fallout is stark: Zamzam camp forced residents into perilous displacement with inadequate access to food, water, medical care, or legal recourse. Survivors’ testimonies recount harrowing experiences of indiscriminate gunfire, sexual assault, and loss of loved ones, with many emphasizing a profound sense of abandonment by the international community. Additionally, battles have intensified in nearby Kordofan regions, underscoring the conflict’s volatility and the risk of further civilian suffering.
This pattern of violence in Darfur and other regions pushed the United Nations to label the crimes as horrendous, with calls for accountability amplifying amid fragile ceasefire negotiations. The International Criminal Court and the U.S. have initiated probes into war crimes allegations, including genocide claims against RSF. However, progress toward peace remains uncertain as key factions resist proposed humanitarian truces and political roadmaps.
The RSF’s reliance on brutal paramilitary tactics and indiscriminate violence reflects ongoing power struggles within Sudan’s fractured security architecture, where legacy militias continue to perpetuate cycles of conflict for territorial and political control. The destruction of essential civilian infrastructure damages long-term recovery prospects, entrenching displacement and socio-economic destitution. Without swift international legal action and enforcement of comprehensive arms embargoes, such war crimes risk normalization, threatening regional stability and undermining global norms on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.
Looking ahead, the international community faces both a moral and strategic imperative to bolster humanitarian aid delivery, facilitate credible investigations, and pursue diplomatic solutions addressing the root causes of Sudan’s fragmentation. The effectiveness of mounting pressure on external arms suppliers, including Gulf states implicated in sustaining the RSF’s capacities, will be crucial in de-escalating violence. Additionally, sustained monitoring by human rights organizations and investment in local civilian protection mechanisms are essential to prevent further atrocities and support the millions of displaced who currently endure precarious conditions.
In sum, Amnesty International's report not only exposes the systematic war crimes committed by Sudan’s RSF in North Darfur but also highlights the complex nexus of armed conflict, geopolitics, and humanitarian catastrophe. The unfolding situation poses formidable challenges to international law enforcement and regional peacebuilding efforts under President Donald Trump's administration, which is increasingly engaged in African conflict diplomacy. The urgency to translate condemnation into concrete accountability mechanisms will determine whether Sudan’s tormented Darfur region can move beyond decades of violence and neglect.
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