GENEVA, July 8 (Reuters) - Sudan's RSF forces carried out mass killings, abductions of women and girls, mass gang rapes and forced starvation in a city they besieged and captured last year, as part of an intentional policy amounting to genocide, a U.N. probe said on Wednesday.
The Rapid Support Forces, which are battling the Sudanese army in a civil war, committed the crimes in al-Fashir in north Darfur, which they captured last year after a long siege, the U.N. Fact-Finding Mission for Sudan found.
Survivors described to the mission being raped in rooms where bodies of recently killed civilians, including their own family members, were still lying on the ground.
The report found that the RSF and allies committed the warcrime of starvation by imposing a prolonged siege on the city, impeding relief supplies, and shelling food production systems.
The RSF has denied such abuses in over three years of civil war, saying the accounts have been manufactured by its enemies and making counter-accusations against them.
The U.N. human rights chief warned on Friday that a similar "catastrophe" was unfolding around another large city, al-Obeid, the capital of North Kordofan state, and that his office had documented patterns of summary executions, abductions, torture and sexual violence in the surrounding region.
Members of the U.N. human rights council on Monday condemned the violence and set up an urgent inquiry into alleged abuses there.
Britain and other states have warnedof a risk of large-scale atrocities as the RSF massed forces around al-Obeid, now home to around half a million people including more than 83,000 internally displaced people.
The fact-finding mission had already concluded in a previous report in February that mass killings of non‑Arab communities when the RSF captured al-Fashir bore hallmarks of genocide.
Its new report said it found additional evidence that the widespread and systematic pattern of conduct of theRSF, including large-scale killings, mass-scale rape and deliberate starvation, was part of an intended policy.
"The patterns we documented in al-Fashir - including encirclement, attacks on civilian infrastructure, restrictions on humanitarian access, and widespread abuses against civilians – serve as a stark warning," said Mohamed Chande Othman, the mission's chair.
"The international community must heed these lessons and act to prevent further catastrophe," he added.
(Reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin)
