‘Our job is only killing’ – how Sudan’s brutal militia carried out a massacre

by | Nov 6, 2025 | Top Stories

8 hours agoShareSaveMerlyn Thomas, Matt Murphy & Peter MwaiBBC Verify ShareSaveBBCWarning: This story contains graphic descriptions of executions.Fighters laugh as they ride on the back of a pick-up truck, speeding past a row of nine dead bodies and driving towards the setting Sudanese sun.”Look at all this work. Look at this genocide,” one cheers.He smiles as he turns the camera on himself and his fellow fighters, their Rapid Support Forces (RSF) badges on display: “They will all die like this.”The men are celebrating a massacre that humanitarian officials fear killed more than 2,000 people in the Sudanese city of el-Fasher last month. On Monday, the International Criminal Court (ICC) said it was investigating whether the paramilitary may have committed “war crimes and crimes against humanity”.El-Fasher was a key target for the paramilitary RSF. It was the last stronghold in Darfur held by the Sudanese military – with whom the RSF has waged a devastating war since their ruling coalition collapsed in 2023.More than 150,000 people are estimated to have been killed by the fighting over the past two years and both sides stand accused of a litany of war crimes – many of which were repeated by the RSF after the fall of el-Fasher.A city cut off from the worldHaving held the city under siege for almost two years, from August the RSF moved to consolidate its position and blockade the remaining civilian population.Satellite images show that troops started to construct a massive berm – a raised sand barrier – around the perimeter of el-Fasher, sealing off access routes and blocking aid. By early October the ring completely surrounded the city – with a smaller barricade encircling a neighbouring village.As the siege intensified, 78 people were killed in an RSF attack on a mosque on 19 September, while the UN said 53 more were killed in drone and artillery strikes on a displacement camp in October.Videos shared with BBC Verify also suggested that the RSF sought to impose a blockade of food and essential supplies. In October, footage shows a man with his hands and feet tied behind his back, hanging upside down from a tree with metal chains. The man filming the video accused him of trying to smuggle supplies into the besieged city.”I swear to God you will pay for this you dog,” he shouted, before demanding that the captive beg for his life.Meanwhile, the RSF pushed forward into the city with troops engaged in frenetic street-to-street clashes.Graphic footage shows unarmed people gunned downBy sunrise on 26 October the RSF overwhelmed the final army positions and seized the main base in the city, the headquarters of the 6th Infantry Division, as the military withdrew.Soldiers were filmed laughing as they toured the abandoned headquarters carrying a grenade launcher. Later that day RSF commander Abdul Rahim Dagalo – brother of RSF chief Mohammad ‘Hemedti’ Dagalo – was seen inspecting the base.The RSF – which emerged from the Janjaweed militia that killed hundreds of thousands of people in Darfur between 2003-2005 – has long been accused of committing atrocities against non-Arab groups across Sudan. Footage posted online suggested that paramilitary fighters intended to unleash violence against the civilian population in el-Fasher.Prior to the paramilitary’s seizure of el-Fasher, very little information had emerged from the city for months. But within hours of the military’s collapse, footage of atrocities committed by the RSF started to appear online, shattering the silence that had fallen on the city.One of the most graphic videos to emerge and analysed by BBC Verify showed the aftermath of a massacre at a university building on the western side of the city, where dozens of dead bodies were seen scattered across the floor.An elderly man wearing a white tunic sat alone amongst the bodies. He turned to look as a fighter armed with a rifle walked down the stairs towards him. Raising his weapon, the gunman fired a single shot at the man, who collapsed to the floor motionless. Fellow soldiers, unfazed by the act, immediately spotted another man’s leg twitch in the tangle of bodies.”Why is this one still alive,” one fighter cried. “Shoot him.”Satellite images taken on 26 October appeared to confirm that execu …

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