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UN rights council orders urgent inquiry into Sudan’s al-Obeid

By Thomson Reuters Jul 6, 2026 | 3:49 AM

GENEVA, July 6 (Reuters) – The U.N. Human Rights Council on Monday passed a motion condemning the escalating violence committed ​by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) ‌in Sudan’s al-Obeid and setting up an urgent inquiry into abuses there.

Britain, which brought the motion alongside 14 other states, has previously warned of the ‌risk ​of large-scale atrocities as the ⁠RSF massed forces ⁠around one of Sudan’s largest cities, a siege that recalls the takeover of al-Fashir in North Darfur last year.

“These horrors must not ​be repeated,” Britain’s Human Rights Ambassador Eleanor Sanders told the body.

Others, like South ⁠Africa’s ambassador Zaheer Laher, ⁠backed the move, calling the situation ​a “red alert as the rapid security forces are ​drawing from the very same genocidal ‌playbook they used in al-Fashir.”

The U.N. human rights chief warned on Friday that a “catastrophe” was unfolding around al-Obeid, and that his office ⁠had documented patterns of summary executions, abductions, torture and sexual violence in the surrounding region.

In the ⁠past, the ‌RSF has denied such abuses — ⁠saying the accounts have been manufactured ​by ‌its enemies and making counter-accusations ​against them.

The ⁠motion was adopted by consensus although China disassociated itself from the decision, saying it did not support investigations that target individual countries without their backing.

(Reporting by Emma Farge; editing by ​Matthias Williams)