GENEVA (AP) — Four Western countries floated a proposal Wednesday for the United Nations’ top human rights body to appoint a team of experts to monitor and report on abuses and rights violations in war-wracked Sudan.
Britain, Germany, Norway and the United States are leading the call for the Human Rights Council to name a three-person fact-finding mission to look into possible crimes against refugees, women and children, and others in Sudan.
The U.N. estimates that 5,000 people have been killed and more than 12,000 others wounded since the conflict began.
Political Cartoons View All 1196 Images“Reports indicate the most appalling violations and abuses by all parties to this wholly unnecessary conflict,” Britain's ambassador in Geneva, Simon Manley, told The Associated Press.
The fact-finding mission would aim in part to identify those responsible for rights violations and abuses, in the hope that one day perpetrators might be held to account.
Persons:
Abdel Fattah Burhan, Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, ”, Simon Manley
Organizations:
GENEVA, United Nations, Human Rights, Rapid Support Forces, Associated Press
Locations:
Sudan, Britain, Germany, Norway, United States, Geneva