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In Sudan, satellite images point to horrors in seized city of El-Fasher

Analysis of imagery shows mass graves being dug near a hospital and a mosque, raising alarm over the scale of the carnage in El-Fasher

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This satellite image shows a trench experts suspect of being a mass grave being dug near a former children’s hospital in El-Fasher, Sudan. Photo:  Vantor via AP
Associated Press

Satellite images analysed on Wednesday appear to show mass burials being conducted in El-Fasher in Sudan’s Darfur region after the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces seized it, further raising concerns about the scale of the violence that descended on the city.

The images of El-Fasher come as the two-year war grinds on in Sudan despite growing international outrage, with local media and the United Nations reporting a drone strike targeting a funeral in another city called El-Obeid, killing at least 40 people.

The Yale School of Public Health’s Humanitarian Research Lab analysed images of El-Fasher shot by Vantor, an imaging firm based in Colorado formerly known as Maxar Technologies.

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Those images appear to show mass graves being dug and later covered at two sites in the city, one at a mosque just north of the Saudi hospital where some 460 people reportedly had been killed and another by a former children’s hospital that the RSF had been using as a prison, the researchers said.

This satellite image from November 4 shows a mosque (the centre white building), and a discolouration in the soil near it after apparent digging there in the aftermath of an attack. Photo: Planet Labs PBC via AP
This satellite image from November 4 shows a mosque (the centre white building), and a discolouration in the soil near it after apparent digging there in the aftermath of an attack. Photo: Planet Labs PBC via AP

“It is not possible based on the dimensions of a potential mass grave to indicate the number of bodies that may be interred; this is because those conducting body disposal often layer bodies on top of each other,” their report said.

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