Satellite images show how Sudan's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) is flouting international law by intentionally targeting civilians in the besieged city of El-Fasher - actions that should be considered war crimes, a research team from Yale University says.
We're looking at the growth of an entire new burial area with over 60 new mounds that have been built in just a two-week period, Caitlin Howarth, from the university's Humanitarian Research Lab (HRL), told the BBC.
People are now completely trapped with no hope of escape as the RSF recently completed a 57km (35-mile) earthen wall around the city.
Desperate residents in the army's last stronghold in Darfur say food has run out.
There is nothing left to eat today - all food supplies have run out, the resistance committee for El-Fasher, made up of local citizens and activists, said in a statement on Tuesday.
Even the alternatives that people clung to for survival have disappeared, it said, referring to ambaz, a residue of peanuts after oil has been extracted, which is normally fed to animals.
Sudan plunged into a civil war in April 2023 after a vicious struggle for power broke out between the military and the RSF. Since the conflict erupted, RSF fighters and allied Arab militia in Darfur have been accused of targeting people from non-Arab ethnic groups.
El-Fasher came under siege 18 months ago and a communications blackout makes it difficult to confirm information from the city.
The resistance committee warned that time was running out for the estimated 300,000 people who still live in the city.
We write, we scream, we plead; but it seems our words fall into a void, it said.
Community kitchens have had to stop providing meals to people seeking refuge in shelters, traders inside the city told the Sudan Tribune news website.
They added that all food goods had completely disappeared even from shops, which used to get smuggled stock to sell at exorbitant prices.
Analysis of satellite imagery of Daraja Oula neighbourhood from 26 September (left) and 10 October (right) shows a recently established gravesite in the Daraja Oula neighbourhood had increased by approximately 60 mounds.
These actions, which include targeting houses and places of shelter, are being labeled as potential war crimes by various humanitarian organizations. The urgency for aid and international intervention continues to rise as the situation grows increasingly dire.