USA TODAY US Edition

Suffering in Sudan continues, but world isn’t watching

Civil war has left millions displaced and starving

- Chris Kenning

One year ago, Marwa Ahmed Alrohima Mohammed was pregnant and treating patients at a hospital in the Sudanese capital of Khartoum when her country descended into civil war.

“It was so close. The bombs and the airplanes were right over our heads,” the 35-year-old physician told USA TODAY in a video interview. Fighting left some dead near her home, she said.

After holding out for several weeks, she escaped to the south on a bus with her family, navigating militia checkpoint­s in a dangerous 250-mile journey to Gedaref, near the Ethiopian border.

Now, a year after she fled some of the first blasts of the civil war, Mohammed works in Gedaraf treating some of the millions of Sudanese like her – people who fled a war they thought would end quickly, seeking help they thought would arrive soon.

Instead, they have found themselves amid a growing crisis that many aid workers say the world has largely forgotten.

The civil war has now killed more than 14,000 people, subjected countless people to sexual violence and displaced millions. Yet the U.N. has said its appeal for $2.7 billion in humanitari­an aid for nearly 15 million people inside Sudan has been less than 6% funded. And aid deliveries that do arrive are hampered by fighting and other challenges.

Now aid groups are hoping an internatio­nal donor conference in Paris will bring new funding and urgency to address a humanitari­an crisis that the U.N says has been neglected by the internatio­nal community amid the wars in Gaza and Ukraine.

Tom Perriello, the U.S. special envoy to Sudan, told Reuters that the United States will make a “push” of more funding as Washington seeks to spur on internatio­nal response at the conference, but he didn’t elaborate.

“People are dying because of lack of medicine and lack of food,” said Mohammed’s colleague, health worker Salma Salah. “You just tell them to be patient, but you know that won’t work for very long.”

Both now work with U.S.-based Medical Teams Internatio­nal in Gedaref, where they see many wounds of war. But it is the hunger that reflects the growing warnings of the threat of a wider famine. Already, 18 million Sudanese

face acute food insecurity.

“Women are losing babies. More than 90% of the children under 5 are malnourish­ed,” Mohammed said.

Some of Salah’s relatives – more than two dozen of whom are now packed into one home in Gedaref – keep watching the news for signs of a cease-fire or a new wave of internatio­nal help so they can go home. So far, that hasn’t come.

“My mom always turns on the TV to see what is going on,” Salah said, “and there is no Sudan on TV.”

Why is there a war in Sudan?

The conflict was sparked by tensions between two top Sudanese generals.

Army leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, head of the Rapid Support Forces paramilita­ry group, had jointly ruled since taking power in 2019. But those tensions came to blows last April over plans to combine the two forces.

The conflict spread to other areas across Sudan in a battle that, unlike the country’s many previous conflicts, tore at Khartoum as well as other regions. Momentum has stalled, according to a report by the Internatio­nal Crisis Group on April 11. But the fighting continues.

In the year since it began, the group said, the conflict has been an “incontrove­rtible disaster for the entire country.”

Among the more than 14,000 dead are civilians killed in the escalating violence. Reports of conflict-related sexual violence continue. Internatio­nal Criminal Court prosecutor­s have said there are grounds to believe both sides are committing war crimes, The Associated Press reported.

Health care and banking systems have teetered on collapse. Of the country’s 49 million people, more than 8 million have been displaced, the U.N. said, both within Sudan and into neighborin­g nations.

The war has also hobbled domestic agricultur­al production. Food that is available in markets has shot up in price. Of the 18 million people facing acute food insecurity, nearly 5 million of these are in emergency levels of hunger, the World Food Programme says.

Most of those suffering acute food insecurity are stuck in areas of active conflict, including millions of people in greater Khartoum and Gezira.

“The two sides generally show callous disregard for civilians’ plight,” the group said in its report.

The Sudan INGO Forum says hundreds of thousands could starve.

Helena Cardellach, director for Doctors Without Borders in the country, told USA TODAY the organizati­on also faced challenges getting supplies to areas of need. “The situation is even worse now than six months ago,” she said.

Each day at her clinic in Gedaraf, set among a center for displaced people, Mohammed and other staffers with Medical Teams Internatio­nal provide a range of care, including health and nutrition services. She sees nearly 100 patients a day, among the nearly half-million people who have filled this city as they flee the violence.

Some need medicine for chronic conditions. Others have experience­d sexual abuse. Malnutriti­on is common. And many have no money to flee to safer countries – like one woman she treated, who was caring for two disabled children after their father had been killed. Both were malnourish­ed. “I worry about famine,” she said.

A ‘pitiful’ global response

The meeting in Paris was set to bring together leaders from neighborin­g countries, regional actors, Western states and U.N. agencies and nonprofit groups working in the area, Reuters has reported. Aid groups hope for a major scaling-up of humanitari­an aid.

“The internatio­nal response has been pitiful. We’re at 5% of the needed amount,” Perriello recently told Reuters, adding that the U.S. has committed more than $1 billion in humanitari­an relief to the conflict.

The Crisis Group said diplomats need to push harder on the two warring sides to accept a ceasefire. And it said aid donors should consider funneling money through local volunteers in areas where most major aid organizati­ons have left.

“It has been everyday Sudanese who have − often at great personal risk − stepped up to support each other and become a lifeline for millions of Sudanese,” Eatizaz Yousif, Sudan director for the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee, said in a statement.

Salah continues her work with Medical Teams in Gedaref, where she can hear bombs from distant fighting. This month, several drone attacks on army sites hit Gedaref, according to news reports, threatenin­g what had been a relatively safe haven. Salah said the group has evacuation plans at the ready.

Salah’s parents are still in shock over a conflict they thought would last only a few months at most. They keep their things ready to return, desperatel­y wanting to go home to Khartoum.

Salah must tell them each time that it’s still not safe as fighting continues with no end in sight. But they persist.

“Each day my parents pack their bags,” she said. “Every single morning.”

Until the conflict abates, Mohammed keeps up her daily routine. She gets up early, makes tea and climbs on a rickshaw to travel to the clinic. It’s a place where army checkpoint­s dot the city and residents must be off the streets before a nighttime curfew.

But Mohammed makes the trip carrying her own pain. Her pregnancy, which finally came after multiple medical procedures in her quest to have a child, was lost amid her flight.

 ?? PROVIDED BY MEDICAL TEAMS INTERNATIO­NAL ?? Marwa Ahmed Alrohima Mohammed, a Sudanese physician, works with Medical Teams Internatio­nal in Gedaref, Sudan.
PROVIDED BY MEDICAL TEAMS INTERNATIO­NAL Marwa Ahmed Alrohima Mohammed, a Sudanese physician, works with Medical Teams Internatio­nal in Gedaref, Sudan.

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