The group of more than a dozen independent United Nations experts voiced outrage after the discovery last week of bodies near a Malian military camp days after the army and Russian mercenaries arrested dozens of civilians.
"We urge Malian authorities to conduct prompt, effective, thorough, independent, impartial and transparent investigations into these killings and enforced disappearances," the experts said in a statement.
"Those responsible for unlawful killings and enforced disappearances, whether by direct involvement or complicity, must be prosecuted."
Mali, ruled by a junta following coups in 2020 and 2021, has been grappling with widespread insecurity for more than a decade, largely fuelled by Islamist fighters linked to Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group.
The country's military rulers have broken their long-standing alliance with former colonial ruler France and turned toward Russia.
The junta enlists the services of what it claims are Russian military instructors, but who -- according to a host of experts and observers -- are mercenaries from the private Russian company Wagner.
In Wednesday's statement, the 13 experts, including the UN special rapporteurs on the rights situation in Mali and on summary executions, stressed that unlawful killings could amount to war crimes.
Enforced disappearances may meanwhile constitute crimes against humanity if they are part of widespread or systematic attacks against civilians, they said.
On April 12, Malian army soldiers and Russian mercenaries arrested dozens of men at a market in Sebabougou, in the country's southwest, and took them to the Kawla military camp, two survivors who fled to Mauritania told AFP.
"According to unconfirmed reports, those arrested were tortured and interrogated about alleged links with 'terrorists' at the Kwala military camp," the expert statement said.
"Afterwards, military and security personnel recruited by the Wagner Group reportedly took the victims out of the camp and executed them."
While the exact death toll remained unclear, at least 65 people reportedly disappeared or went missing after being arrested in Sebabougou.
The independent experts, who are mandated by the UN Human Rights Council but do not speak on behalf of the United Nations, said they had received a list from credible sources purporting to show the names of 54 alleged male victims.
"We are deeply troubled by the apparent total impunity and lack of prosecution or prevention of these violations," the experts said.
"Under international law, military commanders and other superiors, including government officials, can be held criminally responsible for crimes committed by armed forces under their effective command and control."
Sudan paramilitaries kill at least 165 in Darfur city over 10 days: activists
Port Sudan, Sudan (AFP) April 30, 2025 - Sudan's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have killed at least 165 civilians over the past 10 days in attacks on a besieged city in the war-torn country's western Darfur region, activists said on Wednesday.
The RSF, locked in a brutal conflict with the army since April 2023, pounded North Darfur's capital El-Fasher with more than 750 mortars, tank shells and heavy artillery rounds, said the local resistance committee, one of hundreds of volunteer groups coordinating aid across Sudan.
The activists said the death toll was confirmed by health facilities following what they described as a "bloody massacre" that targeted residential neighbourhoods, markets and displacement camps.
They added that the real toll was likely higher, with many victims reportedly dying at the scene of the bombardments before they could be taken to hospitals.
El-Fasher is the last major city in the Darfur region still under army control.
The battle for it has intensified in recent weeks, with the UN and international observers warning of a possible large-scale atrocity.
The RSF ratcheted up its assaults on El-Fasher and its surrounding famine-hit displacement camps after the army regained control of Sudan's capital Khartoum last month.
The war, now in its third year, has killed tens of thousands, displaced 13 million and created what the United Nations describes as the world's worst humanitarian crisis.
The conflict has effectively divided the country in two, with the army holding the centre, east and north, and the RSF controlling nearly all of Darfur and parts of the south.
Famine has officially been declared in five areas across Sudan, including three displacement camps near El-Fasher, according to a UN-backed assessment.
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