Hakuto-R Lander carrying UAE rover found on moon’s surface

LROC Narrow Angle Camera mosaic of the HAKUTO-R Mission 1 lunar lander site. (NASA)
Short Url
Updated 24 May 2023
Follow

Hakuto-R Lander carrying UAE rover found on moon’s surface

  • Reasons for crash to be revealed Friday by Japan’s ispace firm

DUBAI: The UAE’s Rashid Rover’s crash site on the moon has been located, it was revealed in new photographs released by NASA on Tuesday.

The rover, which was carried on the Hakuto-R Lander built by Japan’s ispace inc., crash-landed last month after the lander lost contact with mission control.

NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter took 10 images around the landing site, some showing large pieces of debris scattered across the surface. Narrow angle cameras were used to capture the site and to identify changes on the lunar surface.




Before and after comparison of the impact site. (NASA)

A media briefing will be held by ispace on Friday to reveal reasons for the failed mission. During the initial investigation, the Japanese company said the remaining propellent in the lander decreased during the landing attempt, making the descent speed afterwards too fast.

The investigation suggested that the spacecraft may have run out of fuel during the landing attempt, which would have caused the engine to shut down leading to the crash.

The plan for the Rashid Rover was to spend 14 Earth days on the moon and capture photographs for the study of the planet’s geology.

The UAE’s Mohammed bin Rashid Space Centre is already working on a second rover, called the Rashid 2.

Originally published in Arab News Japan


Sudan’s RSF committed war crimes, possible crimes against humanity in El-Fasher: UN

Updated 53 min 19 sec ago
Follow

Sudan’s RSF committed war crimes, possible crimes against humanity in El-Fasher: UN

  • Witness describes seeing bodies thrown into the air ‘like a scene out of a horror movie’
  • High commissioner for human rights calls for ‘credible, impartial investigations to establish criminal responsibility’

NEW YORK: Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces unleashed a “wave of intense violence … shocking in its scale and brutality” during their final offensive to capture the besieged city of El-Fasher last October, committing widespread atrocities that amount to war crimes and possible crimes against humanity, the UN Human Rights Office said in a report published on Friday.
The report, based on interviews with more than 140 victims and witnesses from Sudan’s Northern State and eastern Chad in late 2025, documented more than 6,000 killings in the first three days of the RSF assault that followed 18 months of siege.
The report said at least 4,400 people were killed in El-Fasher during those initial days, and more than 1,600 others were killed while they attempted to flee.
The actual death toll during the week-long offensive is likely to be significantly higher, the report added.
In many cases, attacks were directed against innocent civilians based on their ethnicity or perceived affiliation, the report said.
“The wanton violations that were perpetrated by the RSF and allied Arab militia in the final offensive on El-Fasher underscore that persistent impunity fuels continued cycles of violence,” said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk.
“There must be credible and impartial investigations to establish criminal responsibility, including of commanders and other superiors.
“These must lead to meaningful accountability for perpetrators of exceptionally serious crimes, through all available means — whether fair and independent Sudanese courts, use of universal and extraterritorial jurisdiction in third states, before the International Criminal Court or other mechanisms.”
The report said there were reasonable grounds to believe that the RSF and affiliated Arab militia committed war crimes including murder; intentionally directing attacks against civilians and civilian objects; launching indiscriminate attacks; using starvation of as a method of warfare; attacking medical and humanitarian personnel; sexual violence and rape; torture and other cruel treatment; pillaging; and the conscription, enlistment and use of children in hostilities.
The UN said patterns of violations in El-Fasher mirrored those documented in RSF offensives on Zamzam camp in April 2025 and in El-Geneina and Ardamata in 2023.
Taken together, the report said, the incidents demonstrated an organized and sustained course of conduct suggesting a systematic attack against the civilian population in Darfur which, if knowingly committed as part of such an attack, would amount to crimes against humanity.
“The unprecedented scale and brutality of the violence meted out during the offensive deeply compounded the horrific violations the residents of El-Fasher had already been subjected to during the long months of siege, constant hostilities and bombardment,” Turk said.
The report documented multiple incidents of mass killings targeting locations where civilians had gathered, apparently to inflict maximum harm.
On Oct. 26, around 500 people were killed when RSF fighters opened fire with heavy weapons on a crowd of 1,000 sheltering at Al-Rashid dormitory at El-Fasher University.
One witness described seeing bodies thrown into the air “like a scene out of a horror movie,” according to the report.
The RSF also carried out summary executions of civilians accused of collaborating with the Sudanese Armed Forces, often determined on the basis of non-Arab ethnicity such as the Zaghawa community, the report said. Adolescent boys and men under 50 were specifically targeted.
Turk said he had heard direct testimony from survivors during a recent visit to Sudan describing how sexual violence was systematically used as a weapon of war.
Survivors and witnesses recounted patterns of rape and gang rape, abductions for ransom involving sexual violence, and sexual assault during invasive body searches, with women and girls from the Zaghawa and other non-Arab communities particularly at risk.
The report also documented widespread abductions for financial gain as civilians fled.
It identified 10 detention facilities used by the RSF in El-Fasher where severely inadequate conditions led to disease outbreaks and deaths in custody, including the conversion of a children’s hospital into a detention site.
Several thousand people remain missing and unaccounted for, the UN said.
Turk renewed his call on parties to the conflict to end violations by forces under their command, and urged states with influence to act urgently to prevent a repeat of the abuses documented in El-Fasher.
“This includes respecting the arms embargo already in place, and ending the supply, sale or transfer of arms or military material to the parties,” he said, calling on states to support local, regional and international mediation efforts aimed at securing a cessation of hostilities and a pathway toward inclusive civilian governance.
“In a protection crisis of this scale, human rights must remain central to efforts to achieve a durable resolution of the conflict.”