Sudanese force holding survivors of Darfur siege for ransom, witnesses say

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Yassir Hamad Ali, 36, a Sudanese refugee from Al-Fashir was held captive with 16 others for two days by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in a small riverbed near Al-Fashir after the city was captured, until his family paid 5 million Sudanese pounds for his release. (Reuters)
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Mujahid Eltahir, 35, a Sudanese refugee from Al-Fashir was held captive by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) for three days in Um Dar Bel, northwest of Al-Fashir, after the city was captured, until his family paid a ransom for his release. (Reuters)
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Sudanese refugee from Al-Fashir, who was held captive for three days by the RSF in Um Dar Bel, northwest of Al-Fashir shows a picture of animal feed that he ate during 30-hour walk to safety. (Reuters)
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Updated 04 December 2025
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Sudanese force holding survivors of Darfur siege for ransom, witnesses say

  • “They give you three or four days, and if you don’t transfer the money, they kill you,” said Mohamed Ismail, who spoke with Reuters by phone

CAIRO/TINE: The Sudanese paramilitary force that besieged then overran a city in Darfur in late October is systematically holding trapped residents for ransom, killing or beating those whose families cannot pay, witnesses, aid workers and researchers say.
Reuters could not determine exactly how many people the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and allied militias have detained in and around Al-Fashir, capital of North Darfur.

But the accounts suggest that large groups are being held in a cluster of villages within 80 km (50 miles) of Al-Fashir, while others have been brought back into the city as the RSF demands payments worth thousands of dollars from their relatives.

Their detention shows the risks faced by those who were unable to reach safety from Al-Fashir, which had been the final significant holdout against the RSF in the western Darfur region before its fall.

Witnesses have described mass reprisals including summary executions and sexual violence since the RSF takeover.

It also sheds light on the plight of some of the tens of thousands of people who are unaccounted for as aid agencies push to gain access to famine-stricken Al-Fashir and its environs, which became a focal point in the 2 1/2-year-old war between the RSF and Sudan’s army.
Reuters interviewed 33 former captives as well as 10 aid workers and researchers, who provided previously unreported details about the violence captives faced, the locations where they were held and the scale of the detentions.
Survivors described paying ransoms of between 5 million ($1,400) and 60 million ($17,000) Sudanese pounds — vast sums in an impoverished region.
Many of those who could not pay were shot at close range or mowed down in groups, 11 survivors said, while other captives were badly beaten.

A Reuters reporter saw survivors who had fled over the border to Chad bearing injuries that appeared to be from beatings and gunshots. Reuters could not verify their accounts in full.
“They give you three or four days, and if you don’t transfer the money, they kill you,” said Mohamed Ismail, who spoke with Reuters by phone from Tawila, a town near Al-Fashir under the control of neutral forces.
Ismail said he had left Al-Fashir as the RSF took over the city on October 26, but was captured by the RSF in a village called Um Jalbakh among a group of 24 men.
He and his nephew were each made to gather 10 million Sudanese pounds from family before being set free. Nine other men were killed in front of them, he said.
ETHNICALLY-CHARGED VIOLENCE
Asked for comment, RSF legal adviser Mohamed Mukhtar said most cases of detention and extortion of people from Al-Fashir had been carried out by a rival group whose members disguise themselves in RSF uniforms.
An RSF committee is investigating more than 100 cases of alleged abuse in Al-Fashir daily, with a large number of suspects arrested and nine convicted, the committee’s head, Ahmed Al-Nour Al-Hala, told Reuters.

The capture of Al-Fashir after an 18-month siege was a turning point in a war that erupted from a power struggle between the army and the RSF and has caused what the United Nations has described as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. Both sides have been accused of war crimes.

Up to a quarter of a million people were estimated to be living in Al-Fashir when the RSF seized the city, tightening its grip on a region where the Arab-dominated force and its allies were blamed for mass killings against ethnic non-Arabs earlier in the war — an echo of the genocide in Darfur 20 years before.
Survivors of RSF detention in and around Al-Fashir told Reuters they were frequently asked what tribe they belonged to and attacked with racial epithets.
The International Organization for Migration estimates that more than 100,000 people have fled Al-Fashir since the RSF takeover.

Aid agencies say more than 15,000 of those have arrived in Tawila and about 9,500 crossed into Chad, but most remain in RSF-controlled villages around Al-Fashir — including Garney, Korma, Um Jalbakh, Shagra, Hilat Alsheikh, Jebel Wana and Tora.
Researchers are unclear how many remain within Al-Fashir itself. Aid groups said some residents were unable to flee because they could not pay for transport out of the city, or were too sick or injured to travel.
COMMUNICATIONS BLACKOUT
One former captive who made it to Chad, Yassir Hamad Ali, 36, said he was captured by RSF fighters on October 29 along with 16 other men after fleeing Al-Fashir.

He said the RSF beat him severely and demanded 150 million Sudanese pounds for his release. Speaking to Reuters at a hospital in Tine, near Chad’s border with Sudan, he said the fighters used a Starlink satellite Internet terminal placed on their Toyota Land Cruiser to contact his family via Facebook Messenger.
Swathes of RSF-controlled territory have been under a telecoms blackout since early in the war, leading to a proliferation of Starlink terminals. Starlink did not respond to a request for comment.
Ali said his family eventually negotiated the sum down to 5 million pounds, which they transferred via Bankak, a Sudanese virtual wallet, according to receipts shared with Reuters.
A second man in Tine, Ibrahim Kitr, 30, said his family took out a loan on their home in Atbara city to pay his 35 million pound ransom. “I don’t think they will be able to pay it back,” he said.
His brother, AlHajj Altijany Kitr, 31, said fighters held a gun to his head and beat him severely while on a videochat with the family — a technique similar to those used by gangs on migrant smuggling routes in neighboring Libya, whose members call relatives of detained migrants while abusing them in an effort to extract higher ransoms. The RSF has frequently recruited fighters or militias on the promise of plunder rather than a stable salary, and there has been widespread looting in areas under RSF control.
However, ransom-seeking on the scale seen around Al-Fashir is a newer phenomenon, aid workers say.
Satellite imagery of the village of Garney on November 28 shows hundreds of new temporary shelters constructed over the last month. Two aid workers said this suggested people could be detained there long-term.
DETENTIONS IN AL-FASHIR
Reuters has previously reported that men were separated from women upon arrival in Garney. But women have also been held there. One woman said she had been blindfolded and raped there for several days, while another woman said she had witnessed such rapes.
The second woman, sobbing as she spoke by phone from Tawila, said RSF soldiers threatened to kill her when she tried to intervene.
Eight former captives described being brought back to Al-Fashir, where they said they were held for ransom in buildings including military facilities and university dormitories.
One man, a 62-year-old teacher who asked to keep his identity concealed, said he found himself in Al-Fashir’s children’s hospital with hundreds of other men.
Packed into rows and with nothing to drink, they took water from a stagnant pool in the hospital. They later discovered it was sewage water, and about 300 men died, the teacher said. Two human rights researchers, who spoke to witnesses, provided similar estimates to Reuters.
Another man who had been held in Al-Fashir, 35-year-old Mujahid Eltahir, said he was released after being beaten when a 30 million pound ransom was paid, only to be detained again in the town of Zalingei, where his captors made his family pay another six million pounds. On the road he said he had seen the bodies of seven men he had fled with, carrying gunshot wounds to their head or chest. Speaking to Reuters in N’Djamena, Chad, he showed a picture of his feet, blistered from walking barefoot after RSF troops took his shoes.
Since its takeover of Al-Fashir, the RSF has posted videos and live streams of people being given food and medical care in the city.
A nurse who said she had been held there by the RSF told Reuters its fighters filmed her receiving food and saying she was being well treated.
“They did a video showing that they treated us well. They do that: they torture you one moment, and then put you on live the next,” she said.


What the government takeover of Syria’s largest oil field means for energy security

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What the government takeover of Syria’s largest oil field means for energy security

  • Interim administration has regained control of Al-Omar oil field after years under Kurdish-led SDF control
  • Production boost raises hopes for recovery, but damage and insecurity limit immediate economic impact

LONDON: After years under the control of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, Syria’s largest oil field, Al-Omar, and nearby gas fields in the eastern governorate of Deir Ezzor fell to interim government forces in late January.
It was a significant development that officials and industry experts say could benefit the country’s fragile economic recovery.
The interim government announced on Jan. 18 that the Al-Omar facility and surrounding gas fields had come under army control, after the SDF said it would redeploy east of the Euphrates River following more than a week of clashes in the northeast.
Days later, the state-run Syrian Petroleum Co. began restarting oil and gas production at the newly seized fields and routing output to the Homs and Baniyas refineries, the state news agency SANA reported on Jan. 24.
A company source told The Syria Report that oil production west of the Euphrates stood at 10,600 barrels per day. Since the takeover, production has risen to about 26,000 bpd and could reach 45,000 bpd within months, pending maintenance work.
And although experts caution that the takeover is unlikely to deliver immediate relief, it still carries longer-term significance.
Benjamin Feve, a senior research analyst at Karam Shaar Advisory, said the capture of Al-Omar is “not transformative in the short term” but remains “very important” for Syria’s economy.
“Control of Al-Omar and other Deir Ezzor fields gives Damascus revenue potential and strategic leverage,” Feve told Arab News.
“But in 2026, the contribution will be constrained by rehabilitation timelines, transport bottlenecks, and limited refining capacity, which will make the recapturing of the field a stabilizing factor for the budget and energy supply, maybe, but not really a game changer.”
Security risks further complicate the picture.
“We must also take into account the fact that the security situation in Deir Ezzor and around the Al-Omar field is not fully contained,” Feve said. “There are still risks from (Daesh) insurgents.”
Indeed, security briefings to UN bodies and partners of the US-led coalition against Daesh continue to flag Deir Ezzor and the Syrian desert as among the most at-risk areas for a resurgence.
The vast region, once a Daesh stronghold before the group’s territorial defeat in 2019, has seen a rise in “hit-and-run” attacks over the past year, with sleeper cells reportedly concentrated in the Deir Ezzor countryside.
The collapse of Bashar Assad’s regime in December 2024 left a security vacuum in western Deir Ezzor, creating conditions ripe for renewed attacks. By the end of August 2025, the SDF recorded 117 attacks, compared with 73 incidents during all of 2024.
However, recent political and military developments could improve stability.
On Jan. 30, Syria’s interim government reached a deal with the SDF, providing for the gradual integration of Kurdish forces and institutions into the state.
US Envoy Tom Barrack hailed the agreement as “a profound and historic milestone in Syria’s journey toward national reconciliation, unity, and enduring stability.”
In a long post on X, Barrack wrote that the deal paves the way for rebuilding institutions, restoring trust, attracting investment essential for reconstruction, and securing lasting peace.
Ten days earlier, he wrote that the SDF’s “original purpose” as “the primary anti-(Daesh) force on the ground” had “largely expired” as the new government in Damascus is now ready to “take over security responsibilities.”
The agreement followed weeks of violence in the north.
After US-mediated talks stalled over a March 2025 integration deal, clashes erupted in northern Aleppo in January, particularly in the predominantly Kurdish neighborhoods of Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafieh.
After government forces took control of the neighborhoods, they launched a broader offensive against the SDF in the northeast, later seizing Raqqa and Deir Ezzor governorates and parts of southern Hasakah.
Facing major territorial losses, the SDF agreed to a truce on Jan. 18 after talks with US officials, though reports of violations continued.
Under the Jan. 30 deal, the SDF is to withdraw from front lines, its fighters are to join the Syrian army, and its administrative bodies are to be integrated into state institutions.
The agreement also provides for the formation of a military division made up of three brigades of former SDF fighters, the coalition said in a statement on X.
Control of prisons and oil and gas fields was transferred from the SDF to the interim authorities as part of the arrangement.
Syria’s oil wealth, though diminished, remains significant.
In 2015, Oil & Gas Journal estimated the country’s proven oil reserves at 2.5 billion barrels and its gas reserves at 8.5 trillion cubic feet.
Before the civil war erupted in 2011, crude production reached about 386,000 bpd, according to the Ministry of Petroleum. Output plunged to between 24,000 and 34,000 bpd from 2014 to 2019, according to Statista.
By 2021, production averaged 85,900 bpd, though only about 16,000 bpd came from fields under the Assad regime’s control. The rest was produced in areas held by the SDF and US forces.
Gas production that year stood at 12.5 million cubic meters per day — roughly a third of prewar levels.
Early in the conflict, Daesh seized much of eastern Syria’s oil infrastructure. By 2014, the group controlled more than 60 percent of national production, producing about 50,000 bpd, which it sold at very low prices on black markets to finance operations, according to the Financial Times.
Years of fighting and neglect badly damaged oil and gas infrastructure, leaving Syria heavily reliant on Iranian supplies until Assad was overthrown in late 2024.
While the transfer of energy assets to the interim government led by Ahmad Al-Sharaa marks a pivotal moment, experts say Damascus faces many hurdles.
“The main constraints are systemic rather than geological,” Feve said, citing “widespread damage at Al-Omar and neighboring assets, degraded well integrity, reservoir mismanagement caused by years of rudimentary extraction, and a largely nonfunctional midstream network.”
He added that “key pipelines and pumping stations linking Deir Ezzor to the Baniyas refinery are out of service,” forcing the government to rely on “costly trucking to transport crude from Al-Omar to Baniyas” in the coastal region.
While Al-Omar produces light, sweet crude suitable for Baniyas, the route is operationally inefficient.
Sanctions-era shortages of spare parts, financing and qualified contractors mean “even basic rehabilitation” will take time, Feve said, “requiring lengthy technical assessments and phased rebuilding rather than a quick restart.”
Economic sanctions imposed by the US, EU, UK, and others since 2011 crippled Syria’s energy sector by restricting trade, financing and investment. Their gradual easing over the past year offers a path to recovery, though progress is likely to be slow.
Even with full rehabilitation, Al-Omar alone would not meet Syria’s total crude oil and production needs, Feve said, noting refinery constraints and mismatches in production.
“Domestic production could significantly reduce imports and improve energy security,” he said, but Syria “will continue to require substantial external supplies of crude oil and refined products for the foreseeable future, especially if no new oil discoveries are made.”
Feve warned that “depending on how much oil was extracted during the conflict — which remains unknown — calculations suggest Syria could potentially run out of oil by 2052.”
“Even in the long term,” he added, “this represents a serious and certain challenge that must be taken into consideration.”
For now, the energy crisis continues to shape daily life across Syria. Power outages last as long as 20 hours a day or more, even in the capital, while fuel for heating, transport, and generators remains scarce or unaffordable for a nation already struggling in poverty.
Any increase in production is likely to be felt gradually, experts say, and Syrians should not expect immediate relief in prices or exchange rates.
“Any ramp-up in production would first affect availability,” Feve said, including fuel for power plants, transport, and generators.
“Retail fuel prices in Syria are already at market levels. So, additional domestic supply would mainly reduce shortages and fiscal pressure from imports.
“A meaningful impact on inflation or the Syrian pound would likely take several months and depends on sustained production, reduced imports, and improved foreign exchange management.”
The price of a liter of octane-95 gasoline in Syria currently stands at about 100 Syrian pounds, or approximately $0.85, according to GlobalPetrolPrices.com. The global average is about $1.31 per liter.
For now, the return of Al-Omar is less about lowering prices than easing shortages over time, but it is unlikely to translate quickly into broader economic relief.