New Mexico probes allegation of bodies buried near Epstein ranch

By Andrew Hay

Reuters

Feb 18 (Reuters) - New Mexico's Department of Justice said on Wednesday the state was investigating an allegation, which emerged from documents released by the U.S. Department of Justice, that the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein ordered the bodies of two foreign ‌girls buried outside his remote New Mexico ranch.

New Mexico Department of Justice spokesperson Lauren Rodriguez said it had requested from the U.S. ‌Justice Department an unredacted copy of an email in 2019 containing the allegation.

The U.S. Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The FBI declined comment.

"We are actively investigating ​this allegation and are conducting a broader review in light of the latest release from the U.S. Department of Justice," Rodriguez said in an emailed response to queries about the case.

A day earlier, New Mexico's legislature launched the first comprehensive investigation into accusations that Epstein sexually abused girls and women at the Zorro Ranch 30 miles (48 km) south of Santa Fe for more than two decades. Pressure from Democratic lawmakers to uncover Epstein's crimes has become a major political challenge for President ‌Donald Trump.

The redacted 2019 email, contained in the latest ⁠release of Epstein-related documents by the U.S. Justice Department, had been sent a few months after Epstein's death to Eddy Aragon, a New Mexico radio show host who had discussed the Zorro Ranch on his program.

The sender, claiming to be ⁠a former Zorro Ranch employee, requested payment of onebitcoinin return for videos that the email said had been taken from Epstein's house and showed the financier having sex with minors.

Aragon said in a phone interview that he believed the email to be legitimate and immediately forwarded it to the FBI. He said he did ​not ​receive any payment from or have any further contact with the sender, although he recently ​tried to respond to it for the first time but ‌the address was no longer functioning.

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The redacted email to Aragon said two foreign girls had been buried on Epstein's orders "somewhere in the hills outside the Zorro" and that the two had died "by strangulation during rough, fetish sex."

A 2021 FBI report, also contained in the latest Epstein file release, said Aragon visited an FBI office to report the email, which offered seven videos of sexual abuse and the location of two foreign girls buried on Zorro Ranch in return for one bitcoin.

A Reuters search of other documents among the Department of Justice's disclosures did not find any other references to the allegations in the redacted ‌email or what investigators made of its claims.

The Justice Department warned last year that some ​of the files it disclosed from its investigation of Epstein "contain untrue and sensationalist claims," and ​that they include anonymous accusations that investigators did not corroborate, or in ​some cases determined to be false.

In an interview on Wednesday, New Mexico State Land Commissioner Stephanie Garcia Richard said her ‌office had found the redacted email during a recent search ​of the latest Epstein file release.

Garcia Richard, ​in a February 10 letter to the U.S. Justice Department and a statement, called on federal and state justice officials to fully investigate allegations of criminality on Epstein's ranch and state lands adjacent to it.

Epstein leased around 1,243 acres (503 hectares) of state lands around the ranch in ​1993. Garcia canceled the leases in September 2019 after ‌her office determined Epstein did not use the land for ranching or agriculture but as a privacy buffer around his ranch.

Epstein died ​in a New York jail in August 2019. His death was ruled a suicide.

(Reporting by Andrew Hay in New Mexico; Additional ​reporting by Brad Heath in Washington; Editing by Donna Bryson and Edmund Klamann)

New Mexico probes allegation of bodies buried near Epstein ranch

By Andrew Hay Feb 18 (Reuters) - New Mexico's Department of Justice said on Wednesday the state was inve...
US orders restrictions on new FEMA disaster deployments during DHS shutdown

By Ted Hesson and Kanishka Singh

Reuters

WASHINGTON, Feb 18 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's administration has ordered the Federal Emergency Management Agency to suspend the ‌deployment of hundreds of aid workers to disaster-affected areas around the country while ‌the Department of Homeland Security is shut down, internal messages reviewed by Reuters showed.

DHS, which FEMA is ​part of, entered a partial shutdown on Saturday, but has largely continued to operate since most of its functions are deemed essential. The shutdown happened after Republicans and Democrats failed to reach a deal on immigration enforcement reforms.

"DHS has issued a stop-travel order for all ‌DHS funded travel, effecting 2/18/26, ⁠for the duration of the lapse in appropriation. Currently this DOES include disaster travel," according to an internal email sent by Kurt ⁠Weirich, a chief of staff at FEMA.

More than 300 FEMA disaster responders were preparing for upcoming assignments but were told to stand down, including some who are currently at a training ​facility, ​CNN reported earlier.

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The freeze comes after Trump said ​on Monday the federal government will ‌step in to protect the Potomac River following the collapse of a major sewer pipe in the Washington, D.C., region last month. A sewer line in Montgomery County, Maryland, collapsed on January 19, causing an overflow of more than 240 million gallons (909 million liters) of wastewater into the Potomac River.

Trump said FEMA, which has seen significant staff ‌cuts since he took office in January 2025, ​will coordinate the response. So far, however, FEMA ​has deployed few, if any, resources ​to assist with the sewage spill, CNN reported, citing three agency ‌officials.

A FEMA spokesperson told CNN restrictions on ​travel were "not a choice ​but are necessary to comply with federal law." The statement cited by CNN added that "FEMA travel related to active disasters is not cancelled."

FEMA's mission is to ​help people before, during ‌and after disasters, including hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes and floods. It brings in emergency ​personnel, supplies and equipment to stricken areas.

(Reporting by Ted Hesson and Kanishka ​Singh in Washington; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

US orders restrictions on new FEMA disaster deployments during DHS shutdown

By Ted Hesson and Kanishka Singh WASHINGTON, Feb 18 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's administra...
Trump's rationale is still opaque as he slides closer to war with Iran

The United States may be on the cusp of launching military action that would mark the most decisive moment in its near half-century showdown with Iran.

CNN A billboard with a picture of Iran's flag on a building in Tehran, Iran, on January 24, 2026. - Majid Asgaripour/Wana News AgencyReuters

Yet there's little public debate about what could be a weekslong assault with consequences that are impossible to predict.

There's no full-court press from top national security officials. President Donald Trump is making hardly any effort to share the rationale for the potential or why military personnel might be asked to risk their lives. And the White House is giving no public sign that it knows what may unfold in Iran if its clerical regime is toppled, an eventuality that could cause enormous reverberations in the Middle East.

The president has made no final decisioneither way, sources told CNN.

But every day, and following the failure of histepid diplomacyto make breakthroughs so far, Trump is being dragged inexorably closer to a fateful decision point. The military has told the White House that it could be ready to launch an attack by the weekend, following a buildup of aerial and naval assets, CNN reported. But one source said that the president has privately argued for and against action and has polled advisers and allies on what he should do.

Given the stakes, and the potential risk to American personnel, the lack of a specific public rationale for any war with Iran seems surprising.

This narrative deficit was reflected in the White House briefing Wednesday, ironically on the eve of the first meeting ofthe president's Board of Peace. Press secretary Karoline Leavitt was asked the pertinent question of why Trump might need to launch a strike on Iran's nuclear program, which he has insisted he alreadytotally obliteratedin a round-the-world bombing raid last year.

"Well, there's many reasons and arguments that one could make for a strike against Iran," Leavitt said, offering no specifics.

Trump's explanations extend only to repeated warnings that Iran will face the consequences if it doesn't make a "deal" with the United States. Last week, he saidregime change in Tehranmight be the "best thing" that could happen.

Ordering the military into battle is the most somber duty of presidents. Their assumption of the highest office comes with an obligation to explain why force might be necessary. And fuzzy thinking could imperil the mission.

Leavitt implied that Americans should just trust the president. "He's always thinking about what's in the best interests of the United States of America, of our military, of the American people," she said.

This would be a thin foundation on which to launch a major war that might end up costing billions of dollars and unknown numbers of American and Iranian lives, and that could trigger huge military and economic repercussions in the Middle East.

It could also worsen Trump's already stark domestic unpopularity in a midterm election year.

An emboldened Trump sizes up his tolerance for risk

US President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio  sit in the Situation Room as they monitor the mission that took out three Iranian nuclear enrichment sites, at the White House in Washington DC, on June 21, 2025. - Daniel Torok/The White House/Getty Images

Trump wouldn't like any comparison with the Iraq war that began in 2003, given its disastrous aftermath. But before that conflict, the Bush administration spent months in a PR offensive designed to convince the country of its later-debunked rationale for the war. It also managed to win congressional authorization for the invasion — at least securing a domestic legal basis for its actions.

If Trump persists in failing to level with citizens and Congress and then takes military action, he will be prolonging a trend of his second term. And he will be leaving himself politically exposed in the event that strikes go wrong.

But it also appears that Trump is emboldened by his successful ouster of Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro in a spectacular operation last month that killed no US troops. His tolerance for risk may also be heightened because the US assassination of Iranian military and intelligence chief Qasem Soleimani in his first term failed to trigger the kind of regional conflagration and Iranian attacks on US allies that some experts predicted.

In recent weeks, Trump's strategy on Iran has seemed to mirror his playbook in Venezuela, where he amassed a huge naval armada and demanded concessions. This is 21st-century diplomacy backed by aircraft carrier groups and cruise missiles.

But he risks creating a box for himself that it will be difficult to exit with credibility intact if it turns out that his repeated claims that Iran wants a "deal" are wrong.

The kind of deal that Trump can offer Iran may be unacceptable to its clerical regime, whose top priority is perpetuating itself. And a deal Tehran could offer Trump may be one he'd never accept, since it doesn't want to talk about its ballistic missiles or regional proxy network, which he sees as red lines.

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Iranian concessions on a nuclear program that is already severely disrupted in return for sanctions relief would be unacceptable to Trump. He can't afford politically to emulate the nuclear deal agreed by the Obama administration that he trashed. And lifting sanctions could help the regime survive.

The New York Times quoted Iranian sources as saying that Iran has indicated willingness to suspend enrichment for three to five years in return for sanctions relief. But Dennis Ross, a former US Middle East peace envoy, told CNN's Wolf Blitzer on Wednesday that this was a symbolic concession. "It's pretty hard to see them enriching while Trump is still in office. And what they're seeking is the lifting of economic sanctions, which is a way of … giving them a kind of lease on life."

Why now might be the moment to strike Iran

People are seen standing in front of a currency exchange office as Iranâs national currency continues to lose value in Tehran, Iran, on January 28, 2026. - Fatemeh Bahrami/Anadolu/Getty Images

The White House may not be telling Americans why it might be time to go to war with Iran. But that doesn't mean there are not strategic rationales for doing so. In that sense, Leavitt is right.

Trump's obsession with naming buildings after himself and erecting new ones — such as the planned White House ballroom — suggest he's increasingly preoccupied with his legacy.

Ending the often-hot cold war with Iran that has bedeviled every American president since Jimmy Carter would secure him a true place in history. And it could put a historic capstone on an estrangement with revolutionary Iran that began with the humiliation of Americans held hostage in 1979-81, which scarred US global confidence and prestige.

Trump might never get a better opening. The regime has arguably never been weaker. Its regional proxies, like Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon — which were once an insurance policy against an outside attack — have been shredded by Israel.

Iran's government is facing its worst-ever domestic crisis. It's clouded by doubt over the revolutionary succession after 86-year-old Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei dies. The economy is wrecked. Desperation recently drove protesters onto the streets amid food and water shortages and grinding economic conditions. The resulting crackdown may have killed thousands. Trump could make good on his pledge to protesters that the US was "locked and loaded" to defend them by toppling the clerical regime.

While Iran may not pose an immediate deadly threat to the US, it has killed scores of Americans in terror attacks and through militias during the Iraq war. Its leaders have long threatened to wipe Israel off the map — a threat that would become even more grave with nuclear weapons. And a stable, democratic and unthreatening Iran would boost the emergence of a new Middle East, powered by the growing global influence of US allies in the Gulf.

Trump would, of course, be a hero of Iranians if he delivered them from repression.

Why a strike against Iran would be such a risk

Members of Iranian militia forces (Basij) attend an anti-Israeli march in Tehran, Iran, on January 10, 2025. - Majid Asgaripour/Wana News Agency/Reuters

But there are many reasons why he might be smart to blink.

A serious attempt either to decapitate the Iranian regime or to devastate the military capacity of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and the Basij paramilitary militia would likely require a multi-day air campaign. This could lead to significant civilian casualties. It would raise the possibility of US combat deaths or the capture of US pilots, which could turn into a propaganda disaster.

While some critics have pointed to Trump's vows to wage no new wars in the Middle East, an Iran conflict would likely not lead to the kind of massive land invasion that turned Iraq into a morass. But as in that war, the best day for the US might be the one when it fires its first shock-and-awe volleys.

It's also unlikely that any strike against Iran's clerical leaders would be as clean as the special forces mission that spirited Maduro out of Venezuela.

There is also the problem of what might come next if the revolutionary government were to fall. Failing to anticipate the day after haunted US regime change efforts in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya this century.

"My question is, after all is said and done, if this lasts for weeks, what happens next?" Colin Clarke, executive director of the Soufan Center told Isa Soares on CNN International. "Then you're dealing with a power vacuum, then you're dealing with the potential for insurgency. And, you know there's a range of states and non-state actors that would look to exploit that."

Iran, the seat of the ancient Persian civilization, is less plagued by sectarian divides than Iraq, which splintered after the US invasion. But the loss of central authority might be devastating. And the lack of a coherent umbrella leadership for protesters or organized internal opposition raises further questions about a smooth transition. Any US and Israeli joint military action would be certain to include wide-ranging attacks on IRGC facilities and forces. But sources told CNN this week that US intelligence community still believes that the most likely candidate to fill a leadership void would be the hardline guard corps. So ousting theocrats in Tehran might just lead to an equally radical anti-US replacement.

And longer and more complex military action in Iran than in Venezuela with uncertain consequences would increase political pressure on Trump at home amid multiple polls showing majorities of Americans oppose a new Middle East war. It could also test Trump's bond with the MAGA movement, since he's spent the last 10 years telling his base there will be no more foreign quagmires.

While officials said that forces would be positioned to strike Iran at the weekend, US action is not guaranteed. The start of the Muslim holy month Ramadan could augur a delay. So could Trump's annual State of the Union address Tuesday. Trump prizes the unpredictable, so Iran will be on full alert.

But unless Iran capitulates to terms that Trump is still yet to fully explain to the public, more time will not ease the most fateful dilemma yet of his second term.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump’s rationale is still opaque as he slides closer to war with Iran

The United States may be on the cusp of launching military action that would mark the most decisive moment in its near h...
New Photo - Lawmaker says the US deported a sick baby, while authorities say the child was medically cleared

Lawmaker says the US deported a sick baby, while authorities say the child was medically cleared Thu, February 19, 2026 at 6:44 AM UTC 0 Rep. Joaquin Castro speaks at a news conference in the US Capitol in Washington DC, on January 9. Heather Diehl/Getty Images US immigration authorities deported a 2monthold baby with bronchitis to Mexico along with his family, a US representative from Texas said. The child was so sick he had been unresponsive "in the last several hours" but was discharged from the hospital anyway, US Rep. Joaquin Castro said Tuesday in an X post.

Lawmaker says the US deported a sick baby, while authorities say the child was medically cleared

Thu, February 19, 2026 at 6:44 AM UTC

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Rep. Joaquin Castro speaks at a news conference in the US Capitol in Washington DC, on January 9. - Heather Diehl/Getty Images

US immigration authorities deported a 2-month-old baby with bronchitis to Mexico along with his family, a US representative from Texas said.

The child was so sick he had been unresponsive "in the last several hours" but was discharged from the hospital anyway, US Rep. Joaquin Castro said Tuesday in an X post.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement deported the baby along with his 16-month-old sister, his mother and his father, Castro said. The Democratic lawmaker said he confirmed this with the family's attorney.

"To unnecessarily deport a sick baby and his entire family is heinous," Castro said.

He vowed to "hold ICE accountable for this monstrous action."

A spokesperson for the US Department of Homeland Security, Tricia McLaughlin, said Wednesday that the child was in "stable condition and medically cleared for removal" and that pediatricians gave the parents a nasal saline spray with a nasal bulb syringe to continue care.

McLaughlin said Border Patrol apprehended the child's mother, Mireya Stefani Lopez-Sanchez, crossing the border illegally near Eagle Pass, Texas, on January 21.

Lopez-Sanchez chose to take her child with her when Border Patrol transferred her to ICE custody, McLaughlin said.

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"All of her claims were heard by a judge and found not to be valid," McLaughlin said.

A judge issued Lopez-Sanchez a final order of removal on February 8, and she was removed from the US with her child on Tuesday, McLaughlin said.

"She received full due process," McLaughlin said.

The detention of children by US immigration authorities has come under heightened scrutiny since President Donald Trump's administration began its immigration enforcement crackdown.

Images of 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos wearing a bunny hat and being surrounded by ICE officers in Minnesota last month sparked an outcry. The boy and his father were released shortly after on a judge's orders.

The father and son were held at a family detention center in Dilley, Texas, which is where Castro said Lopez-Sanchez and her baby were held.

Last year, court filings said families and monitors at federal facilities reported contaminated food and a lack of access to medical care or sufficient legal counsel. The filings said hundreds of immigrant children also lingered in federal detention beyond a court-mandated limit, including some who were held more than five months.

Bronchitis is a condition that develops when airways in the lungs become inflamed and cause coughing, the National Institute of Health said on its website.

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Lawmaker says the US deported a sick baby, while authorities say the child was medically cleared

Lawmaker says the US deported a sick baby, while authorities say the child was medically cleared Thu, February 19, 20...
New Photo - Gas explosion kills 13 after apartment building partially collapsed in southern Pakistan

Gas explosion kills 13 after apartment building partially collapsed in southern Pakistan Thu, February 19, 2026 at 7:29 AM UTC 0 1 / 0Pakistan Gas Explosion BuildingRescue workers recover a body from the rubble following a gas explosion in an apartment building in Karachi, Pakistan, Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026.

Gas explosion kills 13 after apartment building partially collapsed in southern Pakistan

Thu, February 19, 2026 at 7:29 AM UTC

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1 / 0Pakistan Gas Explosion BuildingRescue workers recover a body from the rubble following a gas explosion in an apartment building in Karachi, Pakistan, Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Ali Raza) ()

KARACHI, Pakstan (AP) — A gas explosion ripped through an apartment building in Pakistan's largest port city of Karachi on Thursday, killing at least 13 people, including women and children, and injuring several others after part of the structure collapsed, police and rescue officials said.

The explosion happened in a residential area of Karachi, the capital of Sindh province, local police chief Rizwan Patel said. Rescuers were still removing rubble to search for any survivors trapped under the debris, he added.

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Patel provided no further details but said the search-and-rescue operation was ongoing.

Most houses and apartment buildings in Karachi, like elsewhere in Pakistan, are supplied with natural gas for cooking. However, many households also rely on liquefied petroleum gas cylinders because of low natural gas pressure.

In July, a gas explosion following a wedding reception at a home in Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, killed eight people, including the bride and groom. The blast occurred as guests had gathered to celebrate the couple, authorities said.

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Gas explosion kills 13 after apartment building partially collapsed in southern Pakistan

Gas explosion kills 13 after apartment building partially collapsed in southern Pakistan Thu, February 19, 2026 at 7:...
New Photo - UN experts say destruction by Sudan's rebels in el-Fasher in October bears 'hallmarks of genocide'

UN experts say destruction by Sudan&x27;s rebels in elFasher in October bears &x27;hallmarks of genocide&x27; JAMEY KEATEN and SAMY MAGDY Thu, February 19, 2026 at 7:06 AM UTC 0 1 / 0UN Sudan GenocideFILE Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, center, greets the crowd during a militarybacked tribes' rally in the Nile River State of Sudan, July 13, 2019. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Hjaj, File) () GENEVA (AP) — A "campaign of destruction" in October by Sudanese rebels against nonArab communities in and near a city in Sudan's western region of Darfur shows "hallmarks of genocide," U.N.

UN experts say destruction by Sudan's rebels in el-Fasher in October bears 'hallmarks of genocide'

JAMEY KEATEN and SAMY MAGDY Thu, February 19, 2026 at 7:06 AM UTC

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1 / 0UN Sudan GenocideFILE - Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, center, greets the crowd during a military-backed tribes' rally in the Nile River State of Sudan, July 13, 2019. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Hjaj, File) ()

GENEVA (AP) — A "campaign of destruction" in October by Sudanese rebels against non-Arab communities in and near a city in Sudan's western region of Darfur shows "hallmarks of genocide," U.N.-backed human rights experts reported Thursday, a dramatic finding in the country's devastating war.

The Rapid Support Forces carried out mass killings and other atrocities in el-Fasher after an 18-month siege during which they imposed conditions "calculated to bring about the physical destruction" of non-Arab communities, in particular the Zaghawa and the Fur communities, the independent fact-finding mission on Sudan reported.

U.N. officials say several thousand civilians were killed in the RSF takeover of el-Fasher, the Sudanese army's only remaining stronghold in the Darfur. Only 40% of the city's 260,000 residents managed to flee the onslaught alive, thousands of whom were wounded, the officials said. The fate of the rest remains unknown.

Sudan plunged into conflict in mid-April 2023, when long-simmering tensions between its military and paramilitary leaders broke out in the capital Khartoum and spread to other regions including Darfur.

The devastating war has killed more than 40,000 people, according to U.N. figures, but aid groups say that is an undercount and the true number could be many times higher.

The RSF and their allied Arab militias, known as Janjaweed, overran el-Fasher on Oct. 26 and rampaged through the city. The offensive was marked by widespread atrocities that included mass killings and summary executions, sexual violence, torture, and abductions for ransom, according to the U.N. Human Rights Office.

They killed more than 6,000 people between Oct. 25 and Oct. 27 in the city, the office said. Ahead of the attack, the rebels ran riot in the Abu Shouk displacement camp, just outside of the city, and killed at least 300 people in two days, it said.

The RSF did not respond to an e-mailed request for comment. The group's commander, Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, has previously acknowledged abuses by his fighters, but disputed the scale of atrocities.

At least 3 criteria for genocide were met, team says

An international convention known colloquially as the "Genocide Convention" — adopted in 1948, three years after the end of World War II and the Holocaust — sets out five criteria to assess whether genocide has taken place.

They are: killing members of a group; causing its members serious bodily or mental harm; imposing measures aimed to prevent births in the group; deliberately inflicting conditions calculated to bring about the "physical destruction" of the group; and forcibly transferring its children to another group.

The fact-finding team, which doesn't have final say on the matter, said it found at least three of those five were met in the actions of the RSF. Under the convention, a genocide determination could be made even if only one of the five were met.

The RSF acts in el-Fasher included killing members of a protected ethnic group; causing serious bodily and mental harm; and deliberately inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about the group's physical destruction in whole or in part — all core elements of the crime of genocide under international law, according to the fact-finding team.

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The report cited a systematic pattern of ethnically targeted killings, sexual violence and destruction and public statements explicitly calling for the elimination of non-Arab communities.

'Not random' excesses of war, chair says

Team chair Mohamed Chande Othman, a former chief justice of Tanzania, said the RSF operation were not "random excesses of war" but pointed to a planned and organized operation that bore the characteristics of genocide.

El-Fasher's residents were "physically exhausted, malnourished, and in part unable to flee, leaving them defenseless against the extreme violence that followed," the team's report said. "Thousands of persons, particularly the Zaghawa, were killed, raped or disappeared during three days of absolute horror."

The fact-finding mission pointed to mass killings, widespread rape, sexual violence, torture and cruel treatment, arbitrary detention, extortion, and enforced disappearances during RSF's takeover of el-Fasher in late October.

The report documented cases of survivors quoting its fighters as saying things like: "Is there anyone Zaghawa among you? If we find Zaghawa, we will kill them all" and "We want to eliminate anything black from Darfur."

The report pointed to "selective targeting" of Zaghawa and Fur women and girls, "while women perceived as Arab were often spared."

A call for accountability

The fact-finding team was created in 2023 by the Geneva-based Human Rights Council, the U.N.'s leading human rights body, which has 47 member countries drawn from membership in the world body.

The team called for accountability for perpetrators and warned that protection of civilians is needed "more than ever" because the conflict is expanding to other regions in Sudan.

Over the course of the conflict, the warring parties were accused of violating international law. But most of the atrocities were blamed on the RSF: The Biden administration, in one of its last decisions, said it committed genocide in Darfur.

The RSF has been supported by the United Arab Emirates over the course of the war, according to U.N. experts and rights groups. The UAE has denied the allegations.

The RSF grew out of the Janjaweed militias, who became notorious for atrocities in the early 2000s in a ruthless campaign against people identifying as East or Central African in Darfur. That campaign killed some 300,000 people and drove 2.7 million from their homes.

___

Magdy reported from Cairo. Fatma Khaled in Cairo contributed to this report.

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UN experts say destruction by Sudan's rebels in el-Fasher in October bears 'hallmarks of genocide'

UN experts say destruction by Sudan&x27;s rebels in elFasher in October bears &x27;hallmarks of genocide&x27;...
New Photo - South Korean Ex-President Sentenced to Life in Prison for Insurrection

South Korean ExPresident Sentenced to Life in Prison for Insurrection Chad de GuzmanThu, February 19, 2026 at 7:36 AM UTC 0 South Korean former President Yoon Sukyeol attends a hearing for his impeachment trial at the Constitutional Court in Seoul on Feb. 13, 2025. Credit SeongJoon Cho—Bloomberg/Getty Images South Korea's former President Yoon Sukyeol was sentenced to life imprisonment Thursday after being convicted of abusing his authority and leading an insurrection related to his imposition of martial law in late 2024.

South Korean Ex-President Sentenced to Life in Prison for Insurrection

Chad de GuzmanThu, February 19, 2026 at 7:36 AM UTC

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South Korean former President Yoon Suk-yeol attends a hearing for his impeachment trial at the Constitutional Court in Seoul on Feb. 13, 2025. Credit - SeongJoon Cho—Bloomberg/Getty Images

South Korea's former President Yoon Suk-yeol was sentenced to life imprisonment Thursday after being convicted of abusing his authority and leading an insurrection related to his imposition of martial law in late 2024.

Presiding judge Ji Gwi-yeon from the Seoul Central District Court said that Yoon "directly and proactively planned the offense," which "resulted in enormous social costs," and that "it has been difficult to find any indication that the defendant has expressed remorse regarding this." Ji also convicted former Defense Minister Kim Yong-hyun for participating and planning the insurrection with Yoon.

Ji blamed Yoon and Kim for causing "incalculable" harm to South Korea's international reputation as well as domestic public trust in institutions, including the police.

But Ji also said that Yoon's insurrection plan was not "extremely meticulous" and that there appeared to be efforts to restrain the use of physical force, such as the lack of live ammunition fire. He also referenced Yoon's "advanced age." Yoon is 65.

While prosecutors sought a death sentence for Yoon, experts previously told TIME that he would likely not have actually faced execution even if he received it. Despite the sentence continuing to be handed out on rare occasions, South Korea has had an effective moratorium on carrying out capital punishment since 1997. Yoon also could still appeal the ruling, which would escalate the case to a higher court and could take months to resolve.

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Yoon's lawyer expressed concerns about the conviction to reporters outside the court, saying that it appeared to be predetermined before the trial even took place. "We are witnessing a reality," the lawyer claimed, "in which the rule of law is collapsing."

If his appeals are unsuccessful, Yoon will spend the rest of his life behind bars. He has been jailed since July 2025 and has already been sentenced to five years in prison on separate charges. After Thursday's ruling, he still faces six more trials.

Yoon had declared martial law on Dec. 3, 2024, though it was reversed several hours later by the legislature, who went on to impeach him for his blatant bid to seize power during the final months of his lame-duck presidency.

Several South Korean leaders have been prosecuted and jailed after leaving office, but Yoon, a staunch conservative and former prosecutor-general, became the first President in the country's history to be detained on criminal charges while still in office.

Yoon, in his defense, has denied charges of insurrection, instead accusing the rival Democratic Party of obstructing his agenda, which he says forced him to declare martial law to maintain order. Democratic Party leader Lee Jae-myung was elected in June last year to succeed Yoon.

Still, Yoon, who was unpopular during his presidency, has become a figurehead for South Korea's populist right. Outside his hearing on Thursday, hundreds of supporters gathered to protest his prosecutions as political persecution, as simultaneous anti-Yoon rallies took place nearby. According to reports, some pro-Yoon supporters were in tears after the verdict.

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South Korean Ex-President Sentenced to Life in Prison for Insurrection

South Korean ExPresident Sentenced to Life in Prison for Insurrection Chad de GuzmanThu, February 19, 2026 at 7:36 AM UT...

 

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