Showing posts with label tine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tine. Show all posts

Thursday, October 30, 2025

Sudan siege ends in bloodbath despite pleas for mercy. Evidence emerges of atrocities committed by paramilitary RSF after it seized control of El Fasher

Report from The Financial Times
By William Wallis in Cairo 
Published Wednesday 29 October 2025 - full copy:

Sudan siege ends in bloodbath despite pleas for mercy 

Evidence emerges of atrocities committed by the paramilitary RSF after it seized control of El Fasher 

A camp for displaced families who fled from El Fasher to Tawila in North Darfur © Mohammed Jamal/Reuters 


The fall of the besieged Sudanese city of El Fasher has turned into a bloodbath that rights activists and experts have foretold for months, according to local and international organisations monitoring the war. 


Since Sunday — when militia fighters of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) over-ran the military garrison in the city, the last stronghold of the Sudan Armed Forces in the west of the country — evidence has emerged of many atrocities against civilians trapped or trying to flee. 


The UN Human Rights Office said it was receiving multiple, alarming reports, including of summary executions committed by the RSF, since the group seized most of El Fasher in the western region of Darfur. The RSF, led by Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, also known as Hemedti, is vying for control of all of Sudan. 


“Multiple distressing videos received by UN Human Rights show dozens of unarmed men being shot or lying dead, surrounded by RSF fighters,” the UN said. 


Jim Risch, Republican chair of the US Senate foreign relations committee, said on X that the RSF should be designated a foreign terrorist organisation. 


“The horrors in Darfur’s El Fasher were no accident — they were the RSF’s plan all along,” he said. “The RSF has waged terror and committed unspeakable atrocities, genocide among them, against the Sudanese people . . . America is not safer, secure or more prosperous with the RSF slaughtering thousands.” 


The RSF’s capture of El Fasher has potentially far-reaching consequences for Sudan and its two-year civil war. 


The conflict has displaced more than 14mn people, according to the UN, provoked famine and claimed more than 150,000 lives. 

Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, also known as Hemedti, is head of the RSF

 © Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah/Reuters


El Fasher is the largest city in western Sudan and sits at a crossroads of trade routes, giving the RSF greater control of the flow of weapons and supplies into the region through Libya and Chad. 


The end of the siege, and the flight of the SAF and allied former rebels on Sunday, potentially frees up RSF militants to take the fight back to areas of the east and centre of Sudan from which they were driven earlier this year. 


General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, Sudan’s military leader and Hemedti’s rival, on Monday said the army had withdrawn as a result of the “systematic destruction they endured” in the city. 


The killings that have ensued, despite repeated warnings based on previous massacres committed by the RSF, marks a new low for decades-long international efforts to protect civilians from war crimes. 


In videos posted online in the past two days, fighters from the RSF, which grew out of the Janjaweed militia that wreaked havoc on Darfur’s Black tribes in the early part of the century, shout racial slurs and revel in pursuing rake-thin men, women and children fleeing across the scrub outside the city. 

Satellite image shows objects on the ground near what are likely to be RSF vehicles in El Fasher on Monday © AP 


Dozens of captured men, bound and lying in rows along the ground, are denigrated and then executed in footage allegedly posted from RSF accounts. 


Among those captured was Muammar Ibrahim, a freelance journalist who has chronicled the fate of civilians trapped in the city during a nearly 19-month siege. Inhabitants depended on dwindling supplies of animal feed and were under constant drone and artillery bombardment. 


Many advocacy groups have been demanding the release of the Al Jazeera contributor. 


Among those killed on Sunday, according to Sudanese activists in touch with the city and surrounding camps for the displaced, was Siham Hassan, a prominent campaigner for social justice. She was once Sudan’s youngest MP and was running a community kitchen. 


Nathaniel Redmond, director of the Yale school of public health, said on Tuesday that the “horror, scale and velocity of killing” in El Fasher had left pools of blood visible from satellites. 


Yale University’s Humanitarian Research Lab — which has been tracking the siege using satellite imagery, open-source online information and testimony from eyewitnesses — said it had found “multiple credible reports of mass killings across social media and open sources” in recent days. 


Satellite imagery showing bodies on the ground and “vehicles in tactical formations consistent with house-to-house clearance operations” in a neighbourhood with thousands of civilians also supported allegations that the RSF had carried out mass killings, Yale’s HRL said. 


“The world must act immediately to put the maximum amount of pressure on the RSF and its backers, specifically the [United Arab Emirates], to end the killing now,” it said, adding that the RSF’s actions “may be consistent with war crimes and crimes against humanity and may rise to the level of genocide”. 

Sudanese refugees from Zamzam camp outside El Fasher receive food at an emergency kitchen while being relocated to a transit camp near the Chad border in Tine, eastern Chad, in May © Getty Images 


“The nations of the world might be able to say that they could not have stopped it, but they cannot reasonably say that they did not know,” Yale’s HRL said. 


The RSF said it was committed to “protecting civilians in El Fasher”, and had deployed specialised teams to clear landmines and “secure the streets and public spaces”. 


It described the “liberation” of El Fasher as “a milestone in the Sudanese people’s struggle against oppression and terrorism”. 


The parallel government launched under Hemedti in Darfur said it condemned any violations and would establish committees to investigate the veracity of videos of atrocities circulating online. 


Western officials, including the UK foreign secretary Yvette Cooper and Massad Boulos, US President Donald Trump’s adviser on Arab and African affairs, urged the militia to open up the area to humanitarian access and to “protect civilians”. But these entreaties from afar have had little obvious effect on the fighters on the ground. 


Critics of the west’s ineffectual response to the Sudanese civil war said that only severe pressure on the UAE, which has allegedly backed the RSF with weapons supplies and trade in gold but denies involvement, could prevent further atrocities in El Fasher. 


“It is beyond an open secret that the United Arab Emirates is arming and supporting the RSF,” said Protection Approaches, a UK-based charity that campaigns against identity-based violence. 


“The single most effective action that could bring pause to the massacre in El Fasher is for the right call from Abu Dhabi to be placed to RSF leadership,” it added. 


Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2025. All rights reserved.


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Friday, December 20, 2024

Sudan’s conflict has new driving force: the meth trade - A postwar addiction crisis is awaiting Sudan

IN October, a member of the Reddit community r/meth, an online hub for methamphetamine enthusiasts, went viral for a series of posts purporting to be from an active duty soldier in the Sudanese conflict. 

In one post, he talks about looting baggies of crystal from the lifeless corpses of fallen foes. In another post, he’s dropping notoriously inaccurate barrel bombs “filled with whatever will go boom” from an old, Soviet-era warplane. 

"More than half" of Sudanese soldiers use meth, Adande said, "mostly to be able to stay up for four or five days straight and get more s**t done ... and as a way to do missions that you probably won't do sober." 

Stimulants in warfare are nothing new, but now they're overheating Sudan's bloody internal conflict. A postwar addiction crisis is awaiting Sudan.

Read the full story here below.

Screenshot of a comment allegedly by Adande posted at Reddit r/meth (Sudan Watch Editor)

For his part, Adande was pessimistic about his nation’s future or a resolution to war, saying “It’s just Sudan being Sudan.” (Salon.com)

________________________________


From Salon.com

By NIKO VOROBYOV

Dated 20 December 2024 1:09PM (EST) - full copy: 


Sudan’s gruesome civil war has a new driving force: the meth trade

Stimulants in warfare are nothing new, but now they're overheating Sudan's bloody internal conflict

Women walk through a war-torn neighborhood in Omdurman on November 2, 2024. (AMAURY FALT-BROWN/AFP via Getty Images)


In October, a member of the Reddit community r/meth, an online hub for methamphetamine enthusiasts, went viral for a series of posts purporting to be from an active duty soldier in the Sudanese civil war. In one post, he talks about looting baggies of crystal from the lifeless corpses of fallen foes. In another post, he’s dropping notoriously inaccurate barrel bombs “filled with whatever will go boom” from an old, Soviet-era warplane. 


This wasn’t the first time 31-year-old Adande had tried meth. After having largely grown up abroad, he’d already been busted for dealing the drug in Oman.


“I was taken from jail and deported and thrown directly in the middle of the war zone,” he told me. Stepping foot back in his homeland, where it was kill or be killed, Adande believed it was in his best interest to enlist.


Adande said he belongs to “a tribal militia called the United Front,” which is now supporting the Sudanese military in its campaign against the Rapid Support Forces, or RSF, a rebel military faction that broke with the government in 2023. He sent along a video of himself holding his ID as proof of his claims.


“I’m not in any specific division, I just happen to be related [to] the militia head, so I was trained a little and got to be a part of many aspects of the war,” he said. “I saw and still see ground action, aerial missions that are coordinated with the army, etc., but I am never on the frontlines as I mainly help with the technical/financial/logistics and anything else my education and experience allows … I do have a rank but it's kinda bulls**t and just based on the family/tribe thing and more honorary than anything. I was just lucky that even though I was never [living] here, just coming from the ‘right’ family is enough to get preferential treatment.”


Sudan, on the frontiers of Arab-dominated North Africa and sub-Saharan Black Africa, has long relied on using tribal militias to quash insurgencies. One such militia was the Janjaweed (sometimes translated as “devils on horseback”), which carried out a genocidal counterinsurgency in the Darfur region of western Sudan from 2003 to 2005, before evolving into the paramilitary RSF led by General Hemedti. After dictator Omar al-Bashir was toppled via a revolution in 2019, the RSF and official Sudan Armed Forces stepped in to “manage” the transition of power. Then, in a 2021 coup d’etat, the SAF cast aside whatever remained of civilian leadership altogether to rule alongside Hemedti’s RSF. But their uneasy power-sharing arrangement collapsed into open warfare by April last year.


The ethnic Arab RSF, backed by wealthy Middle Eastern monarchies such as the United Arab Emirates, has resumed its genocidal campaign against Black Sudanese, allegedly bursting into villages to gang-rape the women in front of their families and slaughter every male older than age 10. There have been reports of mass suicides among survivors. The death toll from the conflict may already be in the hundreds of thousands, although the true number is unknown, while over 14 million have been forced to abandon their homes.


Sudan is a major producer and exporter of cannabis (known locally as "bango"), and for centuries that was the drug of choice until approximately 2019 with the arrival of stimulants, particularly methamphetamine or crystal meth. The seemingly sudden surge of meth use sparked a panic in Sudanese society. The reigning junta declared a war on drugs, claiming that counter-coup protesters were high, while independent media reports the narco-business is facilitated by elements within the military, police and RSF.


Lubna Ali, head of the Bit Makli Organisation and director of the Gadreen Centre for Addiction Treatment, the only such institution in the country which is still functioning, told Salon that in her centre in Port Sudan, 90% of substance use disorders involve methamphetamine.


“Methamphetamine is not produced in Sudan — it only comes from overseas,” Ali said. “The drugs began spreading before the war and attracted the youth, because they have not had self-esteem for a long time. First of all the revolution, and after that corona[virus] comes and there is no school or work for two years. Then this war. Almost five years from when the youth are supposed to finish university, they are stuck in the second year or third year.”

Adande holding a bag of meth (Courtesy of Adande)


“They feel they don't have any future,” Ali continued. “Some of them cope with the stress with drugs. Some of them committ suicide. Some of them illegally emigrate to Europe, paying whatever they have, selling their family houses or do anything. Maybe they sell drugs in the streets to get money to be able to escape out of the country.”


Ali noted that meth use has exploded since the outbreak of war, particularly among militia members. As for drug use within his ranks, Adande says it's “very common.”


“More than half" the soldiers use it, he said, "mostly to be able to stay up for four or five days straight and get more s**t done, and yeah, recreationally too, and as a way to do missions that you probably won't do sober." Senior officers tend to "turn a blind eye if you can control yourself and do your part, and if you tweak and go crazy, you'll get killed in the next mission/raid/battle anyway, so that problem sorts itself out.” He said some officers are using meth as well, but not as many or as visibly as ordinary soldiers.


Drugs and war have been a common combination throughout history. Probably the best-known case study was World War II, where stimulants were used on all sides to keep their troops fighting on minimal sleep. But pretty much any major conflict in the last 2,000 years has featured drugs in some way. The term “Dutch courage” (to do something drunk you'd be too scared to do sober) originates from the Anglo-Dutch wars of the 17th century, where soldiers braced themselves with sips of jenever, a Dutch version of gin.


“The use of alcohol and other drugs during wartime is historically documented back as far as 333 B.C., with references to the use of opium poppy sap to relieve the suffering of war during Alexander the Great's invasion into Persia,” said Dessa K. Bergen-Cico, a professor of addiction studies at Syracuse University. 


In the 1932-35 Chaco War between Bolivia and Paraguay, parcels of coca leaves were airdropped to Bolivian soldiers. Chewing coca provides a mild, invigorating buzz, and if processed further the leaves can be used to extract cocaine. During the 1939-40 Winter War with the Soviet Union, Finnish troops dosed themselves with heroin in order to keep fighting through their runny noses and the fierce Nordic winter. The Finns consumed 25 times more heroin than anyone else in the world, at a time when that drug could be found in any pharmacy as pills or cough syrup. Finland was so fond of heroin that the nation resisted U.N. efforts to ban it all the way into the 1950s.


Long before insurgents in the Middle East began deliberately blowing themselves up, the Japanese used kamikaze pilots in World War II, perhaps the first suicide bombers. Filling their planes with explosives, the kamikazes’ aim was to crash headfirst into U.S. warships, causing maximum damage. 


Methamphetamine was actually invented in 1893 by Japanese chemist Nagayoshi Nagai — before their final mission, the pilots were given large doses to fire them up in case the samurai credo of death before dishonor wasn’t enough. 


The Nazis were especially mad for meth. Tank drivers and fighter pilots were fed meth-filled chocolate bars, and Berlin factories churned out 35 million “energy pills” for the 1940 invasion of France, which partly explains the rapid German advance — they were overamping (the technical term for “tweaking”) all the way to Paris. The Allies, meanwhile, swallowed pep pills known as Benzedrine: A hundred thousand pills were procured by Field Marshal Montgomery for the 1942 battle of El Alamein in Egypt. Only the Red Army didn’t dose its troops with speed, instead drowning them in vodka.


More recently, Captagon, a weaker speed-like stimulant, provided chemical courage to all sides during the Syrian civil war, numbing hunger, pain, fear and the need for sleep.


Substance abuse and addiction are closely correlated with trauma, and a population rattled by guns and grenades can take longer to find peace than negotiations themselves. After World War II, leftover meth stocks were peddled in occupied Tokyo by the yakuza, capitalizing on nationwide shock, defeat and humiliation. Could a postwar addiction crisis be awaiting Sudan?


“Yes, it most certainly will,” warned Bergen-Cico. “Drugs, including alcohol, are mechanisms of defense from one’s thoughts, emotions and physical pain. After decades of conflict, addiction rates among the population in Afghanistan are estimated at 10%. The Ukrainian Health Ministry and Ministry of Defense are actively preparing to meet the traumatic stress and addictions needs of its citizens, veterans and military — knowing that everyone has been affected to some extent.”


As for Adande, when we last spoke he was hiring a smuggler to drive him over the desert abroad. It turns out Sudanese intelligence officers intel are on Reddit as well, and were not too impressed with his viral meth-posting.


“They have a capture or kill order on me, I know that from three reliable sources,” he told me. “Simply because of my history, background and online activity, they think I’m paid by UAE or something and the level of noise my posts made means I am state-backed and not just an idiot over-sharing.”


For his part, Adande was pessimistic about his nation’s future or a resolution to war, saying “It’s just Sudan being Sudan.”


Read more about drugs, war and Sudan

By NIKO VOROBYOV. Niko Vorobyov is the author of the book "Dopeworld." Follow him on X @Narco_Polo420 MORE FROM NIKO VOROBYOV


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View original: https://www.salon.com/2024/12/20/sudans-gruesome-civil-has-a-new-driving-force-the-meth-trade/


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