Sudanese activist sees his executed uncles in RSF videos from el-Fasher

When it was revealed that his hometown of El-Fasher, Mohammed Zakaria, had fallen under the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, he had not slept in two days.

The paramilitary seized the North Darfur governor’s office on Friday, edging closer to taking control of the entire city, as the Sudanese video journalist and human rights activist had been monitoring the deteriorating situation from Kampala, Uganda.

He was afraid of the worst.

The “nightmare” scenario is very personal to Zakaria. He discovered footage posted on Facebook by RSF soldiers standing over dead bodies after the city’s fall through social media. He identified three of his uncles as deceased.

He claimed that they are killing them to celebrate.

He claimed a chilling message about his potential fate had been added to the profile photo of another uncle, who was an RSF fighter.

He said, “We don’t know where he is, but we’re terrified of him.”

El-Fasher’s demise

After an 18-month siege, the Sudanese army confirmed its withdrawal from what had been its final outpost in the Darfur region, which had been held there for months by the determined fighters there. The city fell to the RSF on Sunday.

El-Fasher’s capture marks a significant turning point for Sudan’s civil war, giving the paramilitary complete control over all five state capitals there.

One of the longest urban sieges ever to occur in modern warfare took place in El-Fasher. After being driven out of Khartoum by the army in March, the RSF began encircling it in May 2024 and mounted its assaults on it even more.

International observers have labeled the events that followed its fall as an unprecedented massacre, with satellite imagery and social media footage indicating widespread atrocities committed by RSF fighters, allegedly along ethnic lines.

“This has been the subject of conversation for more than a year. Zakaria broke his voice, telling Al Jazeera, “We knew this would happen.”

Former UN Security Council expert on Sudan, Sarra Majdoub, claimed that Sudan’s observers had warned about the city’s fall for months and that other significant urban areas in Darfur had been captured by the RSF, but “they surprisingly held on for a really long time.”

People with loved ones are anxious and uncertain because of a communications blackout, which has almost stopped communication with the city.

When the city fell, an estimated 260 000 civilians remained trapped in the city, half of whom were children.

In el-Fasher, according to the Sudan Doctors Network, a “heinous massacre” was carried out, while 2, 000 people were executed by the Joint Forces, a coalition of armed rebel groups affiliated with the Sudanese army. 1, 350 deaths were documented by the UN, according to the report.

reports of atrocities

The Humanitarian Research Lab at Yale School of Public Health, which tracks the conflict in Sudan, reported on Tuesday that satellite imagery revealed evidence of widespread mass killings, including what appear to be bloody pools and corpse clusters.

The killings, according to executive director of the Humanitarian Research Lab, were “only comparable to Rwanda-style killings,” according to Nathaniel Raymond, who made the remarks during a press briefing on Tuesday.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk issued a warning about the possibility of “large-scale, ethnically motivated attacks and atrocities” as of October 2, urging immediate action to stop them.

Following the fall of the city, Al Jazeera’s Sanad fact-checking agency found numerous instances of RSF fighters carrying out summary civilian executions. An RSF commander boasted that he had killed 2, 000 people in one video.

The RSF stated in a statement on Monday that it was “protecting civilians.”

According to Majdoub, one of the “most disturbing elements” of the violence was the voyeuristic nature of the videos that RSF fighters recorded.

She recalled that fighters who had previously filmed abuses in locations like El-Geneina in West Darfur and Gezira state had “been there before, and their violence is more exaggerated.”

Finding videos on social media, Zakaria said, “finding someone who is a friend, a distant relative, an uncle, surrounded by RSF fighters, and it is very painful.”

“This is a reality for many people right now.”

He is still unable to locate numerous friends and family members.

Dr. Mudathir Ibrahim Suleiman, the medical director of Saudi Hospital, was one of the people Zakaria last spoke to shortly before the RSF stormed the city.

Zakaria said, “He told me he would leave with a group of doctors.” We discovered that some doctors had reached Tawila, but Dr. Mudathir is not one of them, so I haven’t heard anything until now.

460 people were killed in a massacre at the Saudi Hospital, according to Minni Minnawi, the governor of Darfur. Additionally, he uploaded video to X that depicts a quick execution.

Residents who spoke to Al Jazeera about daily bombardments and frequent drone strikes in the weeks leading up to the final offensive spoke to Al Jazeera. As shelling began at dawn, people dug trenches to conceal themselves, sometimes staying underground for hours.

More than 26, 000 people have fled the fighting since Sunday, according to the UN migration agency, either by emigrants trying to get to Tawila, which is 70 kilometers (43 miles) west or by foot.

Genocide is occurring right now.

Zakaria fled El-Fasher in June 2024 while the country was under siege, making the risky journey through South Sudan to Uganda after his house was shelled and he witnessed a deadly attack close to his grandfather’s house, where seven people, including women and children, were killed.

He said, “It was the hardest decision I’ve ever had to make in my life, to leave my city.”

He stayed in Kampala, monitoring the violence, and making human rights claims.

El-Fasher claimed that while humanitarian organizations were based in Tawila, which was only three hours by car from there, they had been requesting assistance for more than 17 months.

The time has come for action to end. He claimed that there is currently a genocide.

Zakaria claims that in El-Fasher, more than 100 people are still missing.

Russia strikes children’s hospital in Ukraine as Kyiv hits energy sites

At least nine people have been hurt in a children’s hospital in southern Ukraine as a result of a Russian drone attack, according to authorities.

Russian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy described the Russian attack on the medical facility in Kherson as a “deliberate” attack that shows Moscow doesn’t want peace to leave four children injured.

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They “could not have been unaware where they were striking,” he said. Zelenskyy claimed that this was a deliberate Russian attack, specifically against children, against doctors, and against fundamental social guarantees, against all.

The Ukrainian prime minister claims that the hospital had about 100 people inside at the time of the attack. An eight-year-old boy was the youngest of the injured.

Moscow hasn’t made any comments on the strike.

Russian authorities reported earlier on Wednesday that Ukraine had targeted Russian energy infrastructure and slowed down air traffic by sending several drones into Moscow for the third night in a row.

A total of 100 Ukrainian drones were destroyed by Russian air defense units overnight, according to the Russian defense ministry’s statement on Telegram, six of which were over the Moscow region and the remaining over 11 regions and the Crimean peninsula.

The Mariysky refinery in the Mari El region, another in the Ulyanovsk region, and a gas plant in the town of Budyonnovsk in the southern Stavropol region were all hit by Ukraine’s General Staff, according to a Telegram statement from the country’s general staff.

Russian aviation watchdog Rosaviatsiya reported that several airports in Moscow and nearby were shut down at some point during the night for safety reasons.

In recent months, Kyiv has launched long-range drone strikes targeting Moscow and other Russian cities, claiming that the aim is to damage both military and industrial assets.

In addition, the Ukrainian Energy Ministry reported energy strikes on the Odesa, Dnipropetrovsk, and Donetsk regions’ energy systems. Nearly 27 000 households in the southern Odesa region of Ukraine were without electricity overnight, according to the power company DTEK.

Separately, Kyiv claimed that its security services had detained a former military officer from an undisclosed European nation and that the suspect was suspected of spying on Russia’s Ukrainian army.

Second nuclear test

Vladimir Putin, the president of Russia, reported on Wednesday that Moscow had successfully tested a nuclear-capable, nuclear-powered underwater drone, and that it had successfully completed a second nuclear weapons system test.

Putin made the remarks in televised remarks while visiting a military hospital in Ukraine where Russian soldiers were being treated for injuries by Russian soldiers wounded in Ukraine. “Yesterday, another test was conducted for another prospective system, … Poseidon,” also equipped with a nuclear power unit.

The drone torpedo, which can travel at speeds faster than conventional submarines and reach any continent in the world, was denied by the Russian leader, who claimed there was “no way to intercept” it.

Putin watched a recent test of the Burevestnik cruise missile, which he claimed had an “unlimited range,” on Sunday.

Donald Trump, the president of the US, criticized that exercise and demanded that Putin put the focus on averting the end of Ukraine.

Trump cancelled a summit with Putin in Budapest last week because he believed Putin would not agree to compromise and put an end to the conflict.

After a Russian reconnaissance aircraft was intercepted by Polish Air Force fighter jets over the Baltic Sea, tensions with Russia were also simmering in Europe.

The Ilyushin IL-20 aircraft, according to the nation’s armed forces, was discovered in international airspace on Tuesday with its transponder off and no flight plan. Two Polish MiG-29 fighter jets flew it away and escorted it away.

According to the military, Poland’s airspace was not impacted by the incident.

One of Ukraine’s closest political and military allies, the EU and NATO member state serves as a key logistics hub for Western military assistance to Kyiv.

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Mali fuel crisis spirals amid armed group blocking supplies to capital

As a group affiliated with al-Qaeda imposes an economic siege on the country by blocking fuel tanker routes in an effort to destabilize the military administration, parts of Mali’s capital have come to a near standstill.

The United States Embassy in Mali on Tuesday urged Americans to “depart immediately” as the Sahel nation becomes more and more dangerous as the fuel blockade increases.

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This week, there are long lines at petrol stations in the capital’s Bamako, with anger rising as the blockade gets worse. According to Al Jazeera’s Nicolas Haque, the cost of fuel has increased by 500 percent, from $25 to $ 130 per litre.

The armed group Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), which imposed the blockade in retaliation last month for the military’s decision to outlaw fuel sales in rural areas, appeared to have succeeded in generating public outcry against the country’s rulers, Haque noted.

Omar Sidibe, a driver in Bamako, told Al Jazeera, “It’s up to the government to play a full role and take action to… discover the real reason for this shortage.”

According to Haque, al-Qaeda members were ejecting fuel trucks as supplies ran out.

Additionally, for the past two weeks, schools and universities have been closed, and Bamako-based airlines are now halting flights.

The US Embassy has also issued a warning to Americans to leave Mali right away using commercial flights rather than land-based neighboring nations because of the possibility of “terrorist attacks along national highways.”

It advised residents of , Mali&nbsp, to make emergency plans, including ones that would allow them to stay there for an extended period.

However, according to Haque, the military tyrannies resisted saying that “everything is under control.”

In a coup that came first in the year of 2019, the army pledged to end a tumultuous security situation involving armed groups affiliated with al-Qaeda and ISIL (ISIS), but the situation has since only increased.

Tanks are “empty.”

Truck drivers who were prepared to cross the border did not want to speak to Al Jazeera on camera despite the tense scenes from a fuel pit stop in Senegal, which is close to Mali. According to Habee, some transportation firms have been accused of paying truck drivers to move their vehicles.

They have been waiting, their tanks are empty, for months, not days. A dangerous path or journey into al-Qaeda territory is ahead for them, Haque said from Dakar.

Citizens in Bamako are becoming more and more desperate at the same time. “We could have bought gas in cans everywhere before. Gas resellist Bakary Coulibaly told Al Jazeera, “but now there isn’t anymore.”

It’s not certain that there will be gasoline at the gas stations, according to the group that we are required to visit. It’s only present on a select few stations.

In the Sahel, a vast stretch of semi-arid desert stretching from North to West Africa, JNIM is one of several armed organizations that are active there. Large-scale attacks and rapid fighting are carried out there.

The country cut ties with its former coloniser, France, while thousands of French soldiers who were involved in the conflict with the armed groups left&nbsp.

Trump wants China’s ‘help’ to deal with wartime Russia. Will he get it?

Ukraine, Ukraine, and Kyiv rely on Chinese-made components for their drones, jamming devices, and fiber optic cables to prevent jamming.

One of the pioneers of drone warfare in Ukraine claims that Beijing could immediately and utterly ban the imports if it wanted to end the Russia-Ukraine war.

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Andrey Pronin, the owner of a drone school in Kyiv, told Al Jazeera that “almost every component is made in China.” China “could cut off our or our side,” he said.

According to Ukrainian intelligence, Beijing supplies Moscow with four-fifths of drones, electronic chips, and other dual-use items that end up on the front lines to maintain the Russian military’s grip.

In response to Beijing’s export restrictions, Ukraine is trying to wean itself off of Chinese drones, but they still make up a staggering 97% of components, according to the Washington, DC think tank Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

Donald Trump, the president of the United States, hopes that Xi Jinping’s summit with Trump’s Chinese counterpart will change that.

Trump reaffirmed his desire to work with Russia on October 24 after halting his discussions with Russian President Vladimir Putin and imposing sanctions on two Russian oil companies.

On the occasion of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, Trump and Xi are scheduled to meet in Seoul, South Korea. Their most recent meeting took place in Osaka, Japan, in 2019.

Zelenskyy hopes the meeting will “help us all.”

Beijing denies directly playing a role in the Russia-Ukraine conflict despite claims that it is officially neutral about the conflict. However, it serves as Moscow’s primary political and economic supporter.

Moscow is understood by observers to be assisting Beijing in “returning” Taiwan to its fold by disclosing information about the use of drones, the vulnerabilities of Western-supplied weapons, and the operation of airborne troops.

Beijing is purchasing discounted oil, gas, and raw materials in the face of mounting Western sanctions, paying Moscow tens of billions of dollars annually.

Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the president of Ukraine, wants Trump to target that area in Xi’s discussions.

Trump said on Monday, “I think it will help us all if we can come to an agreement with China about the reduction of Russian energy exports.”

However, Trump’s most recent sanctions against state-owned oil company Rosneft and the private Lukoil company could unintentionally strengthen Beijing.

Both businesses will have to sell their foreign subsidiaries, reducing their involvement in international projects, particularly in former Soviet Central Asia and several African nations, where Chinese companies could replace them.

Xi’s contribution to the end of the war is crucial, according to Volodymyr Fesenko, the head of the Kyiv-based Penta think tank.

Russia can’t continue the war, he said, “without the financial support and without the economic cooperation with China.” Russia’s main economic resource is China.

He continued, “Beijing] would have accomplished this war very quickly if it had wanted to end it. It would suffice to discuss China’s harsh position with Putin in private, non-public conversations.

Beijing, however, stated Fesenko, “has no desire or desire to give a gift to Trump.”

On October 27, 2025, a car drives along an anti-drone road near the Ukrainian town of Sloviansk [Sofiia Gatilova/Reuters]

As the White House sought to restrain China’s expanding global influence and its access to Western technologies during his first term in office, ties with Beijing deteriorated.

Beijing threatened to stop the flow of crucial minerals, so China and the US have set tariffs on mutual exports, and Washington promised to halt technology transfer. Trump and Xi have more business to do than Russia, where their countries are currently at war with one another, so the Russia-Ukraine conflict is unlikely to rule the summit.

“Freezing the War”

Beijing has also been investing heavily in new infrastructure while strengthening its economic clout in Eastern Europe, which was Moscow’s former home base.

According to Fesenko, “The escalation of the war and its spread to Europe are things that go against China’s interests.”

Washington and Beijing may want to keep the conflict a simmering or thawing without allowing Moscow or Kyiv to achieve a decisive victory, argued Igar Tyshkevych, an analyst in Kyiv.

Washington won’t gain from Russia’s overwhelming victory, he claimed, as the Kremlin will undoubtedly seek the position of a “third global leader.”

Russia’s complete defeat, however, would not benefit Beijing or Washington because both are concerned about destabilization near their northern and northern frontiers.

Washington is actively working to end the war, according to Tyshkevych. If Beijing continues to move in the same direction, I won’t be surprised.

If the war is frozen, it’s possible that it will rekindle once Russia recovers economically and has enough resources.

Kyiv would look to establish new or expanding partnerships, particularly with those with the European Union and its individual members as well as with Turkiye and Pakistan, both of which have friendly ties to Beijing.

And Putin is still offering Trump numerous incentives.

According to reports, it is proposed to build infrastructure along the Arctic Sea to cut down shipping times from Asia to Europe by weeks.

Moscow also considered a joint project to develop Russian oil and gas fields in Russia’s Far East, sell Russian natural gas to Europe, and supply rare earths, which are important for US tech giants.

Putin may also suggest that Russia’s expertise in processing used nuclear fuel from US power plants be used in post-war situations, as well as developing nuclear security agreements, including non-proliferation.