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Sudan

4 items across 4 editions  ·  last active 4 Jul

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  • due 25 Jul The RSF's el-Obeid offensive will intensify over the next one to two weeks, and a mass-casualty assault on the scale of El Fasher would trigger a fresh cross-border displacement wave toward Chad and Egypt.

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Current read The UN's explicit warning against a repeat of El Fasher's mass-casualty offensive elsewhere in Sudan signals genuine alarm that el-Obeid could produce a comparable exodus; an assault on the scale being warned against would most likely drive a fresh cross-border displacement wave toward Chad and Egypt within weeks, adding to the protracted-displacement pool that eventually surfaces in irregular-migration screening further along international routes.

In the brief

No. IV · Saturday, 4 July 2026
Illegal ImmigrationSudan

UN sounds "red alert" over imminent RSF offensive on Sudan's el-Obeid

What? UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk issued a "red alert" July 3 warning of a looming Rapid Support Forces assault on el-Obeid, a North Kordofan city of roughly 500,000 already hosting about 100,000 people displaced by the war and under siege-like conditions for 18 months. UN monitors documented at least 45 civilians killed and 41 injured across 15 drone strikes in and around the city between June 6-28, including hits on the main power station and fuel depots.
So what? The UN's explicit warning against a repeat of El Fasher's mass-casualty offensive elsewhere in Sudan signals genuine alarm that el-Obeid could produce a comparable exodus; an assault on the scale being warned against would most likely drive a fresh cross-border displacement wave toward Chad and Egypt within weeks, adding to the protracted-displacement pool that eventually surfaces in irregular-migration screening further along international routes.
Developing · Sources: OHCHR · Washington Post (July 3, 2026)
No. III · Friday, 3 July 2026
Illegal ImmigrationSudanChad

More than 6,000 flee West Darfur town after RSF threats, most crossing into Chad

What? The UN's International Organization for Migration says roughly 6,005 people fled the town of Kulbus and three nearby villages in Sudan's West Darfur after Rapid Support Forces members threatened residents over their perceived support for the Sudanese army; most crossed the border into Chad. The Sudanese army has since claimed it retook Kulbus — a rare gain in western Darfur since El-Fasher's fall.
So what? Sudan's civil war continues to generate large, sudden cross-border displacement; while the primary flows remain regional, sustained conflict and state collapse in Sudan feed the broader pool of protracted-displacement populations that eventually appear in irregular-migration flows further along international routes that border authorities screen against.
Developing · Sources: Anadolu Ajansı · Africanews (July 1–2, 2026)
No. II · Thursday, 2 July 2026
Illegal ImmigrationSudan

Amnesty accuses Sudan's RSF commanders of crimes against humanity, ethnic cleansing in El Fasher

What? Amnesty International has accused three Rapid Support Forces commanders of war crimes, including allegations of ethnic cleansing in El Fasher, as UN officials separately warn of continuing risk of mass-atrocity violence across Sudan.
So what? Sudan's war remains one of the world's largest displacement crises; continued RSF atrocities raise the likelihood of further secondary displacement toward Europe and beyond, a trend that partner-nation liaison and traveler-screening posts further along migrant routes continue to track.
Confirmed · Sources: The Washington Post · Amnesty International (July 1-2, 2026)
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Mission areas Illegal Immigration
Also appears with Chad