Sudanese child eating

"The worst thing that can happen is for Sudan to be forgotten."

Abdullahi Hassan, Amnesty researcher for Sudan

Photo of Sudanese woman with her child
©Reuters

Without Abdullahi. Without Amnesty. No testimony. No names. No case.

We will be honest about what we cannot do. We cannot send food to El Fasher or doctors to Tawila. That is not our work. Here is what we can do. Abdullahi Hassan is our researcher for Sudan. One person, covering two regions, working from Nairobi. He and his colleagues read and verified the testimony of those 70 survivors, confirmed what happened at the Saudi Hospital, and gathered enough evidence to publicly name three RSF commanders responsible for torture and for the execution of civilians trying to flee. Their names are now on the record. That matters, because impunity is the engine of this war. Twenty years ago the same forces burned Darfur and faced no consequences, so they came back. Putting names on the permanent record is how that cycle begins to break.

This is an appeal for Amnesty International's human rights work, with Sudan as the focus. Amnesty is impartial, reports violations by all parties, and works strictly within its human rights mandate. We document, we verify, and we use the evidence to push for protection and accountability.