The legal determination I will leave to others. What I will say is that it is well documented that there has been ethnic cleansing of various ethnic groups on a significant level in Darfur. Some of the same groups were targeted in prior genocides. The killings are happening and the risk of genocide is significant.
With El Fasher being under siege—I think it has two million or three million people now, with some 800,000 of them displaced—that is a significant risk. We've seen communities and ethnic minorities in and around El Fasher, like the Zaghawa communities and others, recently targeted by the RSF. Other groups like the Masalit and Fur have been targeted because of their ethnic identities by the RSF and their Arab militia allied forces.
There's no doubt that these killings are happening and that they are, in many respects, conducted on the basis of ethnicity. The potential is there for these killings to happen on a much larger scale. That's why it's critically important right now that we look at El Fasher, which is under siege and has, as I said, almost three million people. There are some very catastrophic scenarios that could play out. This is another reason to elevate this issue to the international community's attention.