Footage shows the Sudanese Rapid Support Forces used anti-aircraft weapons to confront unarmed protesters. Lawyers have said there could be grounds to accuse military authorities of crimes against humanity.
The deaths of at least 41ย unarmed protestersย in Sudan have caught the attention and condemnation of international observers.
Despite the internet outage ordered by General Abdel-Fattah Burhan following theย military coupย on October 25, activists were able to document the use of anti-aircraft weapons and armor-piercing bullets.
The footage shows clearly that theย Sudanese Security Forcesย and militias such as the Rapid Support Forces confronted the demonstrators with weapons that are prohibited from being used against civiliansย and in cities.
Campaign to โintimidate and suppress street protestsโ
Non-government organizations and rights groups have condemned the use of heavy arms against civilians as being in breach of humanitarian agreements that call for protecting civilians.ย
Amnesty International has referred to the extremely violent military reaction in Sudan as โlethal force.โ
โThe deadly attack by Sudanโs security authorities in the past two weeks was calculated to intimidate and suppress street protests against the militaryโs takeover of power last month,โ Deprose Muchena, regional director for east and southern Africa at Amnesty International,ย commentedย in late November.
Meanwhile, also the Sudan Doctorsโ Committee has confirmed that Sudanese security forces usedย live ammunitionย to confront the demonstrators in Khartoum.
Autopsy reports of at least 10 deaths received by DW Arabia from sources in Sudanย show that gunshots caused the deaths.
Sudanese security authorities โ led byย General Abdel-Fattah Burhanย and the vice president of the Sudanese Sovereignty Council and commander of the RSF militia, General Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo โ have denied any involvementย in the demonstratorsโ deaths, saying they used โminimum forceโ to disperse anti-coup protesters.
What kind of weapons?
Theย Stockholm International Peace Research Institute(SIPRI), explained toย DW what types of weapons mounted on four-wheel-drive vehicles can beย seen in the videos.ย
1) ZPU-4 a towed anti-aircraft gun

The Russian anti-aircraft weapon ZPU-4, like this one seen in Libya, is one of the weapons possessed by the Sudanese forces
This Russian anti-aircraft weapon is also produced and licensed in China as โ56โย and in Romania as MR-4. The first version of this weapon was the Soviet KPV 14.5 x 114 mm cannon, with a range of 8 km horizontally and about 5 km vertically.
2) ZU-23-2 anti-aircraft twin-barrelled autocannon

The ZU-23-2 weapon, like this one used in a training exercise in Ukraine, has a range of about 2.5 km
The Russian double-barrelled anti-aircraft weapon with a diameter of 23 mm has a range of about 2.5 km.
3) ZPU-2 14.5 mm anti-aircraft twin guns

Anti-aircraft weapon ZPU-2 was developed in China, and is also produced in Romania, this on was seen in Libya
The ZPU-2 anti-aircraft weapon comes with a 14.5 mm diameter barrel and has been used extensively in several countries, including Libya
4) Khawad heavy machine gun 12.7 x 108 mm

The fully-automated gas weapon is globally known as โThe Dushkaโ (or DShK), seen with military supporters in Sudan
Furthermore, theย Swiss SMALL ARMS SURVEYย Foundation, which monitors the movement of weapons around the world, has confirmed, by email to DW, the Russian origin of three anti-warcraft weapons, as well as the Sudanese production of the Chinese โDushkaโ model.
However, China is by far not new on Sudanese grounds.
As early as 2017, China was named as the largest exporter of arms to Sudan, in aย reportย by theย Conflict Armament Research Institute.
The report highlights the vast number of heavy weapons that have reached Sudan despite a ban on armsย imports that was imposed in 1994ย and complemented by the 2005-UN embargoย following the Darfur crisis.
Who owns theย weapons?
The Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a militia of around 40,000 men led by General Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, owns the majority of the heavy weapons seen in the videos. The militia even shows the weapons inย posts on social media.
โIt is very concerning that they are using those kinds of weapons in a law enforcement context,โ Simon Bagshaw, a former policy adviser at the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Geneva and New York, and an expert on the protection of civilians in armed conflict and forced displacement, told DW.
While Bagshaw said such weapons are not prohibited in and of themselves โ according to international laws, โit is a fortiori that these heavy weapons should not be used against civilians, and if they are used, this is a violation of the law related to the use of force against civilians.โ
โUnjustified violence requires accountabilityโ
Furthermore, Major General Mamoun Abu Nawar, a military expert from Amman, Jordan, pointed out that โthe imbalance between the use of weapons and the reasons for using them leads to the occurrence of a war crime.โ
โThis is unjustified violence that requires accountability within the framework of the Geneva and Rome Conventions,โ he said. โThere is no meaning for a military victory over simple, unarmed civilians.โ
In turn, ย Antoine Saad, an expert in international law and based in Beirut, Lebanon, said Sudanโsย transitional authorityย has turned into a repressive authority that apparently committed a type of crime against humanity and genocide.
โShootings of this magnitude were never proportional to peaceful demonstrations,โ he said.
The Lebanese legal expert said,ย โThe use of heavy weapons such as anti-aircraft and mechanisms down to ordinary live bullets constitutes a crime of genocide and a crime against humanity, especially if this act takes a collective pattern.โ
International sanctions?
Following theย condemnation of excessive force, international sanctions โmay start with a siege on the authorities that commit such crimes, economically and financially,โ Antoine Saad told DW.
For this, he suggested Sudanese activists prepare a legal file that includes complete documented evidence about specific killings and injuries, that activists try to identify the people who carried out the aggression and identify the judicial authorities that refrained from punishing them.
โThe file should also include the political leaders who supervised these events, and once this criminal file is completed it should be referred to the prosecutorโs office as soon as possible,โ he said.0 seconds of 0 secondsVolume 90%Watch video01:20
Sudan sees bloodiest day since military takeover
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This article has been adapted into English by Jennifer Holleis.
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