ICC Reports Breakthrough in War Crimes Investigation Into Sudan's Darfur
The International Criminal Court has told the BBC it has made a breakthrough in its investigation into war crimes committed in Sudan's Darfur region. The court has been examining atrocities linked to the ongoing conflict for the past three years. The development could bring the ICC closer to identifying individuals responsible for some of the war's worst violence.

The International Criminal Court has told the BBC that investigators have achieved a breakthrough in their long-running probe into war crimes committed in Sudan's Darfur region, after three years examining atrocities linked to the conflict.
Court officials did not disclose full details of the development, citing the sensitivity of an active investigation, but described it as a significant step toward building cases against individuals responsible for the violence. Darfur has seen some of the war's most severe atrocities, including reports of mass killings and ethnically targeted attacks documented by international monitors.
The ICC's Sudan investigation has faced repeated obstacles, including limited access to the country and difficulty securing witness testimony amid the ongoing fighting. Officials said the latest progress could accelerate efforts to bring formal charges, though any prosecutions are likely to take considerable time to reach trial.
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