Joint Statement:
Safe Passage: Protection for Civilians Under Siege in El Fasher
1 October 2025 - Time is running out for the estimated 260,000 civilians, including 130,000 children, trapped in El Fasher, Darfur’s final battleground between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF). The RSF has besieged the North Darfur capital for over 500 days, using starvation as a weapon of warfare by blocking food and lifesaving humanitarian assistance from entering. They have built over 38km of earthen walls (berms) at the edges of the city to “control population flow from all directions to and from El-Fasher” according to Yale’s Humanitarian Research Lab. The UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights reports that there are no safe exit routes from El Fasher. The berms will allow the RSF and allied militias to continue to strangulate the civilian population by blocking the entry of food and medicine into the city and obstructing civilians from fleeing.
We, the undersigned civil society organisations and humanitarian actors, urgently call for safe humanitarian access, including voluntary evacuation routes for the civilians trapped in El Fasher. Evacuation routes need to be secured without delay to provide civilians in El Fasher safe, voluntary, and dignified passage.
Over 470,000 people have been displaced from El Fasher and surrounding areas since the start of the siege in May 2024. In the past four weeks, conflict between the belligerents and their allied militias has sharply escalated, along with atrocity crimes against civilians. Testimony from civilians who recently fled El Fasher recount that men and adolescent boys are being killed on the road and that leaving El Fasher is now more dangerous than staying despite the constant daily shelling.
Global paralysis in the response to the Sudan war is contributing to the loss of lives across the country. Words of condemnation will not save lives in El Fasher. However, decisive action by the international community can still prevent the continued massacre of civilians trapped in El Fasher.
It has been almost a year since the UN Secretary General published his recommendations on civilian protection in Sudan. This anniversary marks a year of failure by the international community to make any progress towards protecting civilians in Sudan. The greatest solution to address civilian protection threats in Sudan is a comprehensive nationwide ceasefire. Whilst negotiations continue, action must be taken to immediately address the protection needs of the population in El Fasher.
A humanitarian access plan must be developed and executed as a matter of urgency, in accordance with international humanitarian law, and with binding agreements from all parties to the conflict to respect and uphold the safety of civilians. Negotiations on safe passage and humanitarian access should be actively pursued by diplomatic missions, regional entities, and international stakeholders to ensure unimpeded civilian evacuation.
We urgently call for the following measures:
Safe and voluntary routes must be immediately secured for civilians to leave El Fasher, in full compliance with UN Security Council Resolution 2736. These routes must be agreed upon by all parties to the conflict, and accountability measures must be enforced for any violations of international humanitarian law, including attacks on civilians evacuating.
An evacuation coordinator should be identified from a lead agency with operational capacity and a ground presence. Coordination must be carried out by key UN agencies, the ICRC, humanitarian stakeholders, authorities, and community representatives, with roles clearly defined on logistics, communication, en route assistance, and safety. Community representatives should be regularly consulted to confirm that evacuations remain voluntary.
Humanitarian access routes must be established and monitored using satellite imagery and surveillance UAVs, with daily reports provided to relevant UN bodies, agencies, and key stakeholders. Civilians must also be free to voluntarily leave areas of active conflict using these humanitarian access routes. Senior humanitarian officials must also travel to Tawila and areas surrounding El Fasher to negotiate safe passage with the armed militias stationed on the road from El Fasher to Tawila.
Humanitarian access to El Fasher must be secured to provide life-saving assistance, including medical care, to these vulnerable populations. The humanitarian response across North Darfur must also be scaled up to meet the needs of internally displaced persons (IDPs) with direct and unrestricted support provided to local groups. 35 hospitals have been attacked since the RSF began their siege on El Fasher. A significant portion of El Fasher’s population are not able to safely evacuate the city because they are starving, weak, sick, elderly, disabled, or injured. Humanitarian aid must include water, electricity, fuel, food, and medical supplies. Aid access is also urgent to counter confirmed famine and the worst cholera outbreak Sudan has seen in years, having already caused at least 350 deaths in Darfur.
The immediate provision of safe and unhindered passage for people seeking to evacuate from El Fasher is critical to preventing further atrocities. All civilians, who are trying to escape El Fasher must be allowed to do so safely, voluntarily, and without impediments. The parties engaged in the conflict are obliged under international humanitarian law to protect civilians and civilian infrastructure, ensure safe passage, and facilitate unimpeded humanitarian access. The international community has watched the siege of El Fasher and failed to take the actions needed to protect civilians. At this moment, when the atrocity risk is at its highest, there must be a concerted effort to take action and save lives.
Signatories:
Acción Solidaria
Act For Sudan
Action Kivu
AdNA (Advocacy Network for Africa)
African Centre for Justice and Peace Studies
Africans for the Horn of Africa (Af4HA) Initiative
AGT
Alliance for Peacebuilding
American Friends Service Committee
Association des cultivateurs de collectivités de batangi et de bamate (ACUCOBA)
Atrocities Watch Africa
Avaaz
Brooklyn Coalition for Darfur & Marginalized Sudan
Burmese Rohingya Student Union-BRSU
Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies (CIHRS)
Center for Civilians in Conflict (CIVIC)
Choose Love
Chosen Generation Radio
Christ’s Mandate for Missions
Coalition Against Global Genocide
Coalition des Agriculteurs genrés femmes environnementalistes (CAGFE ONG)
Coalition des Volontaires pour la Paix et le Développement (CVPD)
Confluence Advisory
Council on American-Islamic Relations
CROPD - Grands Lacs
CSW (Christian Solidarity Worldwide)
Darfur Advocacy Group
Darfur and Beyond
Darfur Genocide Victims Advocacy Group (DGVAG)
Darfur Network for Human Rights (DNHR)
Darfur Women Journalists Forum
Darfur Youth Centre for Peace and Development
Decolonize Sudan
Denis Hurley Peace Institute
Doctors Against Genocide
Fikra for Studies & Development
Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect
Human Rights Without Borders
Humanitarian Aid Relief Trust (HART)
iACT
Institute for Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention, Binghamton University
Islamic Relief Worldwide
Joining Our Voices
Journal of Social Encounters
Jubilee Campaign
Katartismos Global
Kentro Christian Network
KYN Health LLC
Law And Liberty Trust
Legal Action Worldwide
March 8 Feminist Group
MedGlobal
Minnesota Peace Project
Mommying While Muslim
Never Again Coalition
New York Coalition for Sudan
No Business With Genocide
Nubia Projects
PAEMA
Pax Christi New York State
Pax Christi USA
Peace Direct
PEN International
Protection Approaches
Refugees International
RI
SalaaMedia Centre
Save the Persecuted Christians
Sennar Human Rights Observatory
She Leads Movement
Society for Threatened Peoples
Stop Genocide Now
Sudan and South Sudan Forum e.V.
Sudan Transnational Consortium
Sudan Transparency and Policy Tracker
Sudan Unlimited
Sudanese women rights action
TAMAD Organization for Peace and Development
TASSC International - Torture Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition
The Earth Elders
The Reckoning Project
The Sentry
The Strategic Initiative for Women in the Horn of Africa (SIHA) of Africa
The Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy (TIMEP)
The United Methodist Church - General Board of Church and Society
U.S. Campaign for Burma
UMOJA AFRICA RDC en UA RDC
Unitarian Universalist Service Committee
Waging Peace
Women4Sudan
Women’s Peace Network
World Over Here
Youth Citizens Observers Network (YCON Sudan)