تحقيق إيكاد يرصد اسم شركة Aerojet Aviation Limited في لقطات نشرها عنصر من الدعم السريع داخل مطار جوبا، ضمن تتبع مسارات تنقل محتملة بين جبهات القتال، مع توثيق عناصر على متن طائرات تابعة لها ورحلات يُرجح انطلاق بعضها من جنوب السودان.
Thugs and gangs in Haiti are on notice: The UN-mandated Gang Suppression Force is going to return Haiti to stability, stop the massive flow of illegal immigration into the U.S., and get rid of the lawlessness afflicting the entire region.
We appreciate the European Parliaments call urging European governments to designate the Rapid Support Forces as a terrorist organization due to the grave crimes and serious human rights violations.We urge others to follow suit in support of justice and accountabilityfor victims.
فيديو يكشف تخريب ونهب واسع لسوق الكرمك على يد مليشيا الدعم السريع.
ما يحدث يؤكد أن هذه المليشيا لا تحمل مشروعًا سوى تهجير المدنيين، وتدمير مصادر رزقهم، ونهب ممتلكاتهم.
إن استمرار تدفق السلاح من دولة الإمارات يطيل أمد الحرب ويغذي الفوضى والخراب، بما يفتح الباب أمام نهب موارد السودان على حساب أمن واستقرار شعبه.
محاولات فرض سيناريو التقسيم الليبي على السودان كأمر واقع، محكوم عليها بالفشل منذ البداية سواء ان جاءت عبر الباب او عبر الشباك. فالسودان ليس ليبيا، ومليشيا الدعم السريع ليست طرفاً سياسياً ذو مطالب سياسية لها اساس اجتماعي، بل هي مليشيا إرهابية ذات طابع فاشي، لا تمثل أي قاعدة اجتماعية حقيقية في السودان، ولا تستند إلى مشروع وطني أو تفويض شعبي.
سعت المليشيا إلى استغلال المظالم التاريخية المرتبطة بالتنمية غير المتوازنة في أطراف السودان، لكن هذه المحاولات تكسرت عند صخرتين لا يمكن تجاوزهما: الأولى، تاريخها بوصفها إحدى أكثر أدوات تهميش هذه الأطراف عنفاً ووحشية، والثانية، سجلها المستمر اليوم من الجرائم والانتهاكات والابادة الجماعية بحق هذه المجتمعات المحلية نفسها، من قتل وتهجير ونهب واحتجاز للمدنيين رهائن خدمة لطموحاتها السلطوية وللمشروع الإماراتي الذي يرعاها ويمدها بأسباب البقاء.
ولذلك فان محاولات بعض دوائر المجتمع الدولي إضفاء شرعية الامر الواقع على سيطرة هذه المليشيا على أجزاء من السودان، وفرض ذلك باعتباره المسار الواقعي الوحيد لوقف الحرب في السودان، تمثل وصفة لإدامة الصراع واطالة امده لا لإنهائه. فشرعنة السيطرة المسلحة على الأرض لا تصنع سلاماً، وإنما تؤسس لدولة منقسمة، وتكافئ استخدام القوة والعنف بوصفهما وسيلة لاكتساب الشرعية السياسية. وهو ما لا يقبله السودانيون ولا يتيحه القانون الدولي ولا العرف الدبلوماسي أن يُفرض عبر ترتيبات الأمر الواقع أو المبادرات التي تمنح المليشيا مساحة قهر الناس بالقوة.
الخلاصة انه لا توجد هدنة يمكن أن تحظى بقبول السودانيين ما لم تتضمن، بصورة واضحة وغير قابلة للتأويل، انسحاب مليشيا الدعم السريع من الفضاءات المدنية والمنشآت المدنية التي تحتلها بالقوة، وإطلاق سراح المدنيين الذين حولتهم إلى رهائن لوجودها العسكري وطموحاتها السياسية ومشروع ال نهيان ومشيخة ابوظبي التوسعي في القارة الافريقية. اما وقف إطلاق النار الذي يكرس الاحتلال المسلح فهو تواطؤ مع اجرام المليشيا ليس الا.
وحدة السودان ليست بنداً قابلاً للتفاوض، ولا يمكن أن تكون ثمناً لتسوية سياسية تفتقر إلى العدالة والشرعية والاستدامة.
British Letter to Starmer Urges Direct Pressure on Mohammed bin Zayed to Stop Rapid Support Forces Militia Attack on El Obeid
The leader of the UK Liberal Democrats, Ed Davey, has urged Prime Minister Keir Starmer to apply direct pressure on UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan to prevent what he described as an imminent attack by the Rapid Support Forces militia on El Obeid, the capital of North Kordofan.
In a letter signed by Davey and senior Liberal Democrat figures, the party warned that Sudan is now in its fourth year of a brutal war and is facing what it described as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis since aid records began.
The letter said the situation in El Obeid has become increasingly dangerous, citing a recent discussion at the UN Human Rights Council on the city’s deteriorating conditions. It referred to the warning issued by UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk, who said the situation amounted to a “red alert” that must reach the desks of heads of state and government around the world in order to prevent atrocity crimes.
According to the letter, an RSF attack on El Obeid appears increasingly imminent. It said drone strikes have targeted basic infrastructure for weeks, including water treatment plants, roads and fuel resources. It also warned that it is unclear whether civilians still have access to the remaining roads out of the city.
The Liberal Democrat leaders cautioned that El Obeid could face levels of violence against civilians similar to what happened in El Fasher in October 2025. The letter noted that the UN Fact-Finding Mission reported that the events in El Fasher showed “hallmarks of genocide”, while Amnesty International documented crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing by the RSF, including murder, torture, rape, sexual slavery, imprisonment, forcible transfer and extermination.
The letter also said that El Obeid differs militarily from El Fasher because the Sudanese Armed Forces are heavily fortified inside the city. As a result, any RSF attack could become a prolonged battle rather than a rapid overrun.
Such a battle, the letter warned, would have catastrophic consequences for civilians. El Obeid is home to around half a million people, including 100,000 people already displaced by the conflict. A prolonged assault would deplete infrastructure vital to sustaining life, make already difficult aid delivery almost impossible, and expose civilians to extreme levels of violence.
The signatories said that if a battle in El Obeid resembles the fall of El Fasher, the international community will have failed in its legal and moral duty to prevent mass atrocities.
The letter called on Starmer to move beyond diplomatic engagement at foreign ministry level and press for direct intervention by heads of government in Western capitals with Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed in Abu Dhabi.
It described the UAE as the key sponsor of the RSF, saying Abu Dhabi holds the power either to give the green light for an attack or to stop it. The letter argued that pressure would be most effective if delivered directly from head of government to head of government, rather than through the Emirati Foreign Ministry, which it said holds relatively limited power in the UAE’s decision-making process.
The Liberal Democrat leaders also called for maximum international pressure to establish a no-drone zone and to implement active practical measures to protect civilians. They further urged support for an agreement ensuring that Sudan’s long-term government is placed in the hands of a civilian-led administration.
The letter concluded by urging Starmer to engage directly with Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed and use Britain’s leverage to prevent the looming attack on El Obeid and protect thousands of lives.
The letter was signed by Ed Davey MP, Leader of the Liberal Democrats, Monica Harding MP, the party’s spokesperson for international development, Calum Miller MP, the party’s spokesperson for foreign affairs, and Lord Purvis of Tweed, the Liberal Democrat Lords spokesperson for foreign affairs and development.
#Sudan
#RSFisTerroristOrganization
#UAEKillsSudanesePeople
#UAESponsorsTerrorism
We welcome the Human Rights Council’s decision to investigate RSF violations in El Obeid and North Kordofan. We urge stronger action, including designating the RSF as a terrorist organization for its grave crimes against civilians.
An estimated 6,000 people were killed by UAE-backed militia in El Fasher, Sudan.
An expert who briefed FCDO about the coming massacre says warnings were ignored and the government put relations with the UAE ahead of saving lives.
https://t.co/NIHYRqlUnw
الفرقة الرابعة مشاة بالدمازين التابعة للجيش السوداني في إقليم النيل الأزرق جنوب شرقي البلاد تنشر جانبًا من العملية العسكرية التي سيطرت من خلالها على مدينة «الكرمك» الاستراتيجية
@_hudsonc You know that this page is a propaganda outlet for the Mafia state (UAE) that has been called out repeatedly right?
Any Sudanic man or woman has the right & freedom to run for office in Sudan & we let Sudanese decide. Even the political prostitute @KHOYousif can run via the UAE
With further horrific atrocities looming in Sudan, @EdwardJDavey and I have written urgently to the Prime Minister, calling on him to use his last days in office to engage directly with the UAE, as the key sponsor of the RSF, to stop the impending violence.
Britain must use maximum leverage to prevent the imminent attack on El Obeid and protect the lives of thousands.
In Al-Kurmuk, the UAE-Backed Rapid Support Militia Continues Its Pattern of Destruction: Looting the Health Insurance Center, Leaving Civilians to Rebuild, as the Army and the People Confront the Impact of Destruction Sponsored by One of the World’s Richest Countries
At the Health Insurance Center in the city of Al-Kurmuk, another familiar face of the crimes committed by the Rapid Support Forces militia appeared in the towns and villages it entered. Looted rooms, scattered papers, an empty pharmacy, and a medical laboratory stripped of its contents. The scene sums up what has happened in many parts of Sudan, where the militia enters public service institutions, leaves them in ruins, and forces civilians to confront the aftermath of destruction once the fighting stops.
The man’s voice in the video carries clear pain as he walks through the center. He speaks with the bitterness of someone seeing a public effort lost before his eyes, and a health facility that once served people turned into a place of loss and looting. He speaks as someone who knows the center, its people, and its value, as if every destroyed room reminds him of those who worked there and those who once waited there for treatment and medicine.
The Health Insurance Center in Al-Kurmuk was one of the city’s important health facilities. The Health Insurance administration had made major efforts to establish and equip it, providing medical equipment and devices, along with a fully equipped dental clinic, so it could offer healthcare and treatment services to the people of Al-Kurmuk and the surrounding areas. The center had also received praise from the senior administration of the fund because of the standard of services it provided and the quality of care it offered to patients.
Then the militia came, extended its hand toward that effort, looted what it could, and destroyed what it left behind. Years of work and construction were lost in moments of recklessness, and the citizen was left to pay the price. A looted pharmacy means a patient searching for medicine and finding nothing. An empty laboratory means a medical service has stopped. A destroyed center means that a city and its surrounding areas have lost a facility that supported people in times of illness and need.
This behavior is familiar from the Rapid Support Forces militia. In every city and village it entered, the same scene was repeated in different forms: homes looted, facilities vandalized, institutions destroyed, and the daily lives of civilians targeted. Schools, health centers, markets, and service facilities became targets of looting and destruction, as if the aim was to break society and strip it of the foundations of life.
In Al-Kurmuk, the video reveals part of the cost that awaits Sudanese people after the militia leaves any area. Liberation opens the road for life to return, while also exposing the scale of destruction that requires difficult work. Civilians need more than security. They need medicine to return, laboratories to function again, pharmacies to be restored, facilities to be repaired, and trust in public service institutions to be rebuilt.
At this stage, the responsibility of the army and the people moves along the same path. The Sudanese army, after fighting the battle of liberation and paying with the blood of its soldiers to recover towns and villages from the militia’s grip, opens the way for civilians to return and protects what remains of state institutions. Along that same path, the Sudanese people stand with patience and determination, each contributing what they can to rebuild what has been destroyed, clean public facilities, revive essential services, and repair the damage the war has left behind in healthcare, education, markets, and daily life.
As Sudanese people try to rise from beneath the rubble, with limited resources and an unbreakable will, the world stands witness to the catastrophic impact of the support provided by the UAE to this militia. One of the richest countries in the world is, through that support, contributing to the destruction of a country exhausted by war and poverty. Yet this destruction has failed to break the will of the Sudanese people or take away their ability to endure, rebuild, and rise again.
#Sudan
#RSFIsATerroristOrganization
#UAEKillsSudanese
#UAESponsorsTerrorism
بأغلبية ساحقة، أقرّ البرلمان الأوروبي، اليوم الخميس، قرارًا يدعو إلى إدراج قوات الدعم السريع على قائمة الاتحاد الأوروبي للمنظمات الإرهابية، مؤكداً أنها تتحمل مسؤولية ارتكاب جرائم حرب وجرائم ضد الإنسانية في السودان.
وحظي القرار بتأييد 476 نائبًا، مقابل 28 عارضوه، فيما امتنع 96 نائبًا عن التصويت. كما أدان "بأشد العبارات" جرائم الحرب والجرائم ضد الإنسانية المرتكبة في السودان، ولا سيما الانتهاكات التي تشهدها مدينة الأُبيّض بولاية شمال كردفان.
This is the year 2026. One might have hoped that, after thousands of years of war, humanity could have come up with a better way to resolve conflicts than killing and mass destruction. Unfortunately, that is not the case. There is now more war and bloodshed raging across the world than at almost any point in decades.
In February 2022, Vladimir Putin, without provocation, invaded Ukraine. The result: hundreds of thousands of soldiers and civilians killed, millions displaced and a war that grinds on with no end in sight.
In October 2023, Hamas attacked Israel, killing 1,200 innocent people and taking 251 hostages. In response, Netanyahu and the Israeli military did not simply wage war against Hamas — they waged war against the entire population of Gaza. At least 73,000 Palestinians have been killed, the real toll almost certainly far higher, most of them women, children and the elderly. Virtually the entire physical infrastructure of Gaza has been destroyed. I agree with the major human rights organizations around the world who call this a genocide.
Four months ago, in collusion with Netanyahu, Trump took a page from Putin's playbook: he started a war with Iran without provocation. The result of this war (and the ensuing Israeli war against Lebanon): 13 U.S. service members dead, thousands of Iranian and Lebanese civilians killed and more than $100 billion in U.S. taxpayer dollars spent.
And in the midst of all of this — Ukraine, Gaza, Iran — there is another horrific war happening now that is getting relatively little attention: the civil war and genocide in Sudan.
Sudan's two rival military factions, the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), the country's national army, and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a paramilitary group, have been at war since 2023. The RSF descends from the Janjaweed militias that carried out Sudan's first genocide in Darfur two decades ago, killing as many as 400,000 non-Arab civilians. Today, the RSF is trying to finish what it started. The State Department has formally determined that the RSF is committing genocide, again, murdering men and boys and systematically raping women and girls because of their ethnicity. Last October, the RSF laid siege to the city of El-Fasher; in just the first three days after it fell, an estimated 6,000 people were killed. Right now, the same horror is unfolding in the city of El-Obeid, where nearly half a million people are trapped.
Let’s be clear. Trump’s good friend and staunch U.S. ally, the United Arab Emirates dictatorship, run by one of the wealthiest families in the world — has financed and enabled this genocide for years. And why is this happening? Billions of dollars of looted gold from Sudan is flowing straight into the pockets of Emirati oligarchs – making a multibillionaire family even richer. This has been documented by the United Nations, independent journalists, and international human rights organizations.
Here is the scale of what this war has caused: at least 59,000 people confirmed killed since 2023, with credible estimates running as high as 150,000. Fourteen million people driven from their homes. Thirty million people, two–thirds of Sudan's population, in need of emergency humanitarian assistance just to survive.
U.S. foreign policy must be based on a respect for democracy and human rights. We cannot be complicit in the face of genocide, no matter where it is happening. Congress must demand that the UAE cease its military support for the RSF and work with the international community and the Sudanese people to bring an end to this horrific conflict and provide the humanitarian aid that is desperately needed there.