ICC Official Says Breakthrough Made in Darfur Investigations

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A “breakthrough” has been made in the investigation into crimes committed during Sudan’s war in ​the Darfur region allowing prosecutors to link them to leadership, a senior International Criminal Court official told Reuters.
The ICC is investigating attacks ‌on the cities of al-Geneina, in 2023, and al-Fashir last year, where UN experts say forces from the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces committed crimes that bear the “hallmarks of genocide” against people from non-Arab tribes.
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“We have got additional evidence, strong evidence, linking what is occurring in Darfur with leadership levels. And we are very, very pleased to say that this is a breakthrough for us,” deputy ​prosecutor Nazhat Shameem Khan told Reuters, following a visit to eastern Chad to meet victims of the attacks.
She did not specify the forces the ​leadership belong to and could not, according to ICC rules, say whether warrants had been or would be applied for.
“We ⁠are confident that there are going to be results in at least a reasonable time,” she added, without giving a timeframe.
In international war crimes trials of political leaders ​it is often hard to link them to specific atrocity crimes committed by lower level perpetrators. Prosecutors need so-called linkage evidence — often in the form of insider ​witnesses or physical records — of political leadership being briefed about operations and plans on the ground.

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