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Sudan: Strong Support for Ongoing Sudan Probe At UN Rights Council

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States Should Work Towards Implementation of Mission’s Recommendations

This week, member states of the United Nations Human Rights Council (HRC) from all regions overwhelmingly voted to renew the mandate of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission (FFM) for the Sudan, established in 2023. The move was widely backed by Sudanese activists.

The fact-finding mission is mandated to investigate crimes committed by Sudan’s warring parties and advance accountability for them, including by collecting and preserving evidence to identify those responsible and for future prosecutions.

The renewal of the fact-finding mission’s mandate comes as an uptick in fighting in Sudan’s capital, Khartoum, and El Fasher, North Darfur, is once again placing civilians at massive risk, with both parties using heavy explosive weapons in densely populated areas, causing civilians to flee seeking safety amid a rapidly deteriorating humanitarian situation.

The increase in support for the resolution this year signals growing recognition of the need to combat the impunity at the heart of Sudan’s conflict, which continues to fuel atrocities, and that justice is central to resolving the crisis.

It was significant that several African countries shifted to more supportive positions on the resolution than in 2023. By voting in favor of the resolution this time, South Africa, alongside Ghana, delivered a powerful message that at a time of selective application of international law, double standards can and should be overcome by raising the bar rather than diminishing it. Countries from other regions, including Malaysia and the Maldives, also shifted to more supportive positions.