Research Breakdown: Sudan’s Blood Visible from Space

Research Organization

Yale Humanitarian Research Lab (HRL) at Yale School of Public Health

  • Led by Nathaniel Raymond, Executive Director
  • Uses satellite imagery analysis combined with open-source intelligence (OSINT)
  • Primary satellite imagery providers: Airbus Defence and Space, Vantor

Report Links:

What Happened: The Fall of El-Fasher

Location: El-Fasher, capital of North Darfur, western Sudan

Timeline:

  • 18-month siege by Rapid Support Forces (RSF) beginning around April 2024
  • October 26-27, 2025: RSF captured the city after the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) withdrew
  • First 72 hours: Mass killings documented through satellite imagery
  • Population trapped: ~250,000-260,000 civilians besieged; only ~65,000 escaped

Key Findings from Satellite Analysis

Visual Evidence Detected from Space:

  1. Reddish-brown ground discoloration consistent with blood-soaked soil
  • Multiple patches large enough to be visible from satellite imagery
  • Discoloration not present in previous satellite images taken before October 26
  1. Clusters of white objects measuring 1.3-2.0 meters
  • Consistent with human bodies lying horizontally
  • Found across multiple locations throughout the city
  1. Locations where bodies/blood were detected:
  • Residential neighborhoods (especially Daraja Oula district)
  • Saudi Hospital grounds (last functioning hospital)
  • Former Children’s Hospital (RSF detention center)
  • Red Crescent Society offices
  • Military bases (6th Division HQ, 157th Artillery Brigade)
  • Along the earthen wall (berm) surrounding the city
  • University grounds and medical science laboratory

Tactical Patterns Observed:

RSF military vehicles (technicals - gun-mounted trucks) consistently positioned near body clusters, indicating:

  • Systematic house-to-house clearance operations
  • Controlled movement and execution sites
  • Deliberate positioning for mass killings

Evidence of fleeing civilians being targeted:

  • 28 destroyed vehicles along escape routes
  • Body clusters along roads and near the defensive berm
  • Objects resembling bodies near vehicles attempting to flee

Methodology

Data Fusion Approach:

  1. High-resolution satellite imagery analysis
  2. Open-source intelligence (social media, local reports)
  3. Video verification from multiple sources
  4. Witness testimony correlation
  5. Temporal analysis (comparing imagery across days)

Limitations acknowledged by researchers:

  • Limited data availability in Sudan conflict zones
  • Reporting bias from those able to communicate
  • Difficulty assessing detention, sexual violence without ground access
  • Satellite imagery limited by available coverage and angles

Scale of Violence

Estimated casualties:

  • Yale HRL: Described as comparable to 1994 Rwanda genocide in velocity
  • Local defense groups: Over 2,000 civilians killed in first 48 hours
  • Sudan War Monitor: Estimated 3,000+ deaths by October 30
  • Researchers: Likely tens of thousands killed in the first week
  • WHO: 460+ executions at Saudi Hospital alone

Nathaniel Raymond’s assessment:

“We have never seen a velocity of violence at this scale… The level of violence and number of incidents in Darfur exceed anything I have seen so far.”

Patterns of Atrocities Documented

  1. Gender-based targeting:
  • Men separated from women and children
  • Reports of men being executed after separation
  • Women and children raped while fleeing
  1. Medical facility attacks:
  • Saudi Hospital: Mass executions of wounded patients and staff
  • Red Crescent offices stormed, medics forced into combat vehicles
  • All hospitals rendered non-functional
  1. Systematic ethnic cleansing:
  • Targeting of Fur, Zaghawa, and Berti ethnic groups
  • House-to-house clearances in specific neighborhoods
  • Racial epithets used in RSF videos of killings
  1. Prevented escape:
  • 57-kilometer berm wall entrapping population
  • Checkpoints where fleeing civilians were killed
  • Communications blackout preventing information flow

Historical Context

RSF Origins:

  • Descended from Janjaweed militias responsible for 2003-2005 Darfur genocide
  • Previously called “devils on horseback” for rape and murder campaigns
  • Now use trucks, drones, and modern weapons instead of horses

Current Conflict:

  • Sudan civil war began April 2023
  • Power struggle between SAF leader General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (“Hemedti”)
  • 12+ million displaced, considered world’s worst humanitarian crisis
  • 30 million need emergency aid

US Determination:

  • January 2025: US State Department determined RSF committed genocide in Darfur

International Response

Geopolitical Backing:

  • United Arab Emirates (UAE) supplies RSF with weapons, drones, funds, and mercenaries
  • British-manufactured arms components recovered from RSF combat zones
  • IL-76 cargo aircraft (linked to UAE resupply) documented near El-Fasher

International Statements:

  • Tom Fletcher (UN Under-Secretary-General): “Blood on the sand… Blood on [our] hands”
  • German Foreign Minister: Called it “absolutely an apocalyptic situation, the greatest humanitarian crisis of the world”
  • Peace talks sponsored by US stalled when UAE refused to address El-Fasher situation

Legal Framework: Yale HRL assessment: Actions may constitute war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide

Current Situation (as of early November 2025)

  • RSF controls all five Darfur state capitals
  • Sudan effectively split east-west
  • Most El-Fasher civilians remain “dead, captured, or in hiding
  • No large-scale movement of survivors detected
  • Mass killings continuing through early November
  • Communications blackout prevents accurate casualty counts

Comparative Historical Analysis

Raymond compared the velocity and systematic nature to:

  • Rwanda 1994: ~800,000 killed by ethnic militias
  • Current situation: Potentially exceeding Rwanda’s pace in affected areas

Sources & Further Reading

  1. ABC News Report on Blood Visible from Space
  2. NBC News: Visible from Space Analysis
  3. Yale HRL Official Reports
  4. Middle East Eye: Blood Splatter Visible from Space
  5. Al Jazeera: Yale Report Findings
  6. Globe and Mail: Signs of Massacres in Satellite Imagery
  7. CBS News: Mass Killing Continuing
  8. Kurdistan 24: Pools of Blood from Space

Note: This research represents one of the first documented instances where pools of human blood from mass killings were extensive enough to be detected and analyzed via commercial satellite imagery, marking a disturbing milestone in both conflict documentation and the scale of atrocities.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

  • minorkeys@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    That says more about the capabilities of satellites than it does to emphasize the extent of the situation. They can see a foot wide object from space, probably smaller