Alert: This Story Contains Explicit Accounts of Shootings.
Militiamen laugh as they travel on the rear of a pick-up truck, speeding by a series of multiple dead bodies and moving facing the sinking African sun.
"Observe this extensive accomplishment. Look at this genocide," a combatant cheers.
The fighter beams as he directs the video equipment on himself and his fellow militiamen, their paramilitary badges visible: "These people will all be killed this way."
The men are rejoicing over a mass killing that humanitarian officials suspect killed more than thousands of civilians in the Sudanese city of el-Fasher in recent weeks.
After maintaining the urban area under siege for approximately an extended period, from late summer the RSF proceeded to strengthen its dominance and prevent access for the remaining inhabitants.
Satellite images show that troops started to build a massive sand wall - a elevated dirt embankment - encircling the boundaries of the city, closing access routes and blocking aid.
While the blockade intensified, 78 civilians were murdered in an militia attack on a religious building on September 19th, while the United Nations stated 53 further were slain in aerial and cannon strikes on a makeshift community in the autumn.
By sunrise on 26 October the paramilitary force conquered the remaining army defenses and seized the primary compound in the urban area, the main facility of the Military Unit, as the military retreated.
One of the most horrific recordings to emerge and studied revealed the results of a massacre at a educational facility on the west of the community, where dozens lifeless forms were visible scattered across the floor.
A senior person wearing a white tunic sat alone surrounded by the bodies. The man rotated to glance as a fighter armed with a weapon walked descending the stairs facing the individual. Raising his weapon, the gunman released a one bullet at the victim, who dropped to the ground still.
"Why is this person yet alive," a militiaman exclaimed. "Shoot him."
Satellite images recorded on 26 October seemed to confirm that shootings were additionally conducted on the roads of al-Fashir, as reported by a study published by the Yale Humanitarian Research Lab.
One witness who communicated stated they had observed "multiple of our relatives being killed - the victims were assembled in a specific area and each one eliminated."
Following the events that followed the massacre, paramilitary chief acknowledged that his troops had carried out "wrongdoings" and said the events would be examined.
Part of the detained was subsequent to a investigation recording his executions. Carefully orchestrated and produced footage shared on the militia's authorized social media account show the individual being escorted into a cell at a jail on the outskirts of al-Fashir.
Simultaneously, the militia and associated social media profiles started trying to alter the account.
Updates showing its fighters distributing assistance to civilians were shared by several accounts, while the force's communications team published several recordings claiming to display the humane treatment of army detainees.
Despite the online campaign being deployed by the paramilitary, their conduct in al-Fashir have generated international outrage.
Elara Vance is a tech journalist with over a decade of experience covering emerging technologies and consumer electronics.