News Flash
PORT SUDAN, Sudan, April 17, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - Amna Ishaq can no longer
feed her children "more than once a day and sometimes not at all" after nearly a year of
devastating war in Sudan.
"We are all sick, along with our children. We have nothing to eat and the water we find is
polluted," Ishaq told AFP at a camp for the displaced in Darfur.
The vast western region is no stranger to war, suffering devastation in a deadly conflict that
began in 2003 and which also sparked a hunger crisis.
With war returning to Sudan last April, the United Nations has warned that "an entire
generation could be destroyed".
The world body says millions of displaced children are starving, have been forced into
marriage or become child soldiers and threatened with death.
When the fighting broke out on April 15, 2023 between Abdel Fattah al-Burhan's army and
Mohammed Hamdan Daglo's Rapid Support Forces (RSF), diplomats and aid workers left
Sudan in droves, effectively ceasing to serve those most vulnerable.
Looting, fighting, air strikes and roads cut by warring factions have isolated every region of
Sudan, a northeast African country more than three times the size of France.
The UN says it has been able to reach only 10 percent of Sudan's 48 million people, with the
country on the brink of famine.
At Otach, a displacement camp set up two decades ago in South Darfur where Ishaq has
taken refuge with her family, rations of maize porridge no longer arrive.
About "222,000 children could die of starvation within a few weeks or months" and "more
than 700,000 this year", according to the UN.
Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said that at least one child dies every two hours at North
Darfur's Zamzam displacement camp alone.
And at Kalma camp in South Darfur, the aid group Alight said that "more than two children
are dying every 12 hours".
- Children have been sold –
Medical journal The Lancet has reported that the small Al-Buluk paediatric hospital in the
capital Khartoum admits "about 25 children for severe acute malnutrition. Each week, two or
three of them die."
Overall, nearly three million children are suffering from malnutrition and 19 million are no
longer in school, according to Save the Children, endangering the future of a nation where 42
percent of the population is under 14 years old.
Even before this war, nearly half of Sudan's children had severely reduced growth and 70
percent were unable to read and understand a simple sentence, the charity says.
Adam Regal, spokesman for independent Sudanese aid group General Coordination for
Refugees and Displaced Persons in Darfur, said he has seen dozens of children die.
He blamed "the stubbornness" of the warring parties, telling AFP that "food and humanitarian
aid no longer arrive" because of a lack of access.
A Khartoum factory that produced nutritional supplements for children has been destroyed by
bombing and vaccine factories for newborns have been looted.
Cholera, measles and malaria prevail in eastern parts of the country.
Adding to the health crisis are the horrors of war.
More and more Sudanese organisations are warning that to feed their children parents are
resorting to "selling" some of them.
One local charity reported that a father sold his 15-year-old daughter for a few bags of grain
at a market.
The UN has also recorded child marriages in response to "family separations" -- mothers or
fathers who have lost their spouses or children while fleeing violence in panic -- or because of
"gender-based and sexual violence including rape and unwanted pregnancies".
- Rape and child soldiers –
The UN said young girls and women have been the victims of "abductions, forced marriages,
and sexual violence related to the conflict in Darfur and in the state of Al-Jazira" south of
Khartoum, where many displaced people are.
Experts from the UN Human Rights Council say they have gathered "information on women
and young girls sold as slaves in markets in areas under the control of the RSF and other
armed groups, particularly in North Darfur".
The dangers facing boys are different: both the army and the paramilitaries, but also tribal and
ethnic militias, "recruit and use children in Darfur, Kordofan, Khartoum, and in the east of the
country", the experts said.
Some parties even force "children from a neighbouring country to actively participate in
hostilities", they added.
Since the early days of the war, videos uploaded by soldiers and paramilitaries regularly show
teenagers on military pickup trucks or with automatic rifles in hand.
It's the "catastrophe of a generation", UN officials said.