Barabra Plett UsherAfrica correspondent

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A network of Colombian mercenaries backed by the United Arab Emirates (UAE) provided critical support to Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) enabling it to capture the western city of el-Fasher last year, a new report says.
The UAE has long denied supporting the RSF, which has been fighting Sudan’s regular army for three years.
El-Fasher’s fall was one of the most brutal chapters of the conflict, which has led to the world’s worst humanitarian crisis with tens of thousands killed and millions forced from their homes.
The CIG has been closely following evidence of extensive Emirati military assistance to the RSF, but “this is the first research where we can prove UAE involvement with certainty”, says director Justin Lynch.
“We are making public what governments have long known – that there is a direct link between Abu Dhabi and the RSF.”
The report “shows mercenaries involved with drones travelling from a UAE base to Sudan before the RSF takeover of el-Fasher”, he says.
“Mercenaries involved in drone operations even named their wi-fi network their unit name – linked to a company operated out of the UAE.”
Colombian President Gustavo Petro was quoted last year as calling the mercenaries “spectres of death” and describing their recruitment as a “form of human trafficking”.
The BBC has asked for a response from the Emirati government to the latest findings.
The UAE has previously issued statements rejecting what it called “false and unfounded allegations” that it backs the RSF and condemning “in the strongest terms” the atrocities committed in el-Fasher.
Analysts agree that foreign support for both sides has been key to the continuation and expansion of the civil war.

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The CIG says it used commercially available technology designed to make advertising more personal to track more than 50 mobile phones in Sudan between April 2025 and January this year whose operators were Colombian mercenaries, including at RSF-held areas from which drones were fired.
It also used flight-tracking data, satellite imagery, social media videos, news and academic articles to support its analysis.
The report says its data details a pipeline that showed the mercenaries present at various regional staging grounds, most significantly a UAE military training facility in Ghayathi in Abu Dhabi.
It followed one phone from Colombia to Abu Dhabi’s Zayad International Airport and then to the facility, where it also found four other devices configured to Spanish, which is spoken in Colombia.
Two of those phones subsequently travelled to Sudan’s South Darfur state and one to the de-facto RSF capital of Nyala, where it logged into wi-fi networks named “ANTIAEREO” (meaning “anti-aircraft” in Spanish) and “AirDefense”.
Nyala is a prominent hub for Colombian mercenaries and RSF drone operations, the report says. The CIG has documented significant drone activity there and identified more than 40 Spanish-language devices.
In another case study the CIG tracked a phone from Colombia to Nyala and then to el-Fasher, in North Darfur state, during the time last October when the RSF took over the city after an 18-month siege.
While in el-Fasher, the device connected to a wi-fi network named “ATACADOR” (“attacker” in Spanish), says the report. It adds that the CIG identified other devices associated with Colombian mercenaries also present during the RSF takeover.

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The fall of the city was accompanied by mass atrocities assessed as war crimes and crimes against humanity by the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and described by UN investigators as bearing the “hallmarks of genocide”.
“CIG assesses that the UAE-Colombian mercenary network bears shared responsibility for these outcomes,” says the report.
“The scale of atrocities and siege in el-Fasher wouldn’t have happened without the drone operations the mercenaries provided,” Lynch adds, noting evidence that they also helped support the RSF siege.
According to the report, the mercenaries operated as part of the Desert Wolves brigade, serving as drone pilots, artillerymen and instructors.
One of them connected to wi-fi networks named “DRONES” and “LOBOS DEL DISIERTO [sic]” (meaning “Desert Wolves” in Spanish), while using Spanish-language settings.
The brigade is led by retired Colombian army Colonel Alvaro Quijano, according to the Colombian digital news site La Silla Vacía. He is based in the UAE and has been sanctioned by the US and UK governments for recruiting Colombians to fight in Sudan.
The Desert Wolves were paid and employed by a UAE-based company with documented ties to senior Emirati government officials, according to La Silla Vacía and documents obtained by the CIG, the report says.
The CIG also says it identified devices with Spanish-language settings at a port in Somalia with links to the UAE, and at a town in south-eastern Libya believed to be a logistical hub for the flow of weapons to the RSF, allegedly facilitated by the Emirates.
The number of Colombian fighters in Sudan has previously been estimated in the low hundreds.
The US has twice sanctioned Colombian nationals and associated companies for recruiting mercenaries to fight in Sudan, in December and again last week.
The US Treasury Department has said that Colombian fighters supported the RSF capture of el-Fasher but has stopped short of making a direct connection to the UAE.
More BBC stories on Sudan war:

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