‘Atrocious’ Sudan war pushing refugees further afield: UNHCR chief

Italian diplomat Filippo Grandi, currently serving as the 11th United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, speaks during an interview on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York, September 22, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 26 January 2025
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‘Atrocious’ Sudan war pushing refugees further afield: UNHCR chief

  • Sudan’s civil war has pitted the army against RSF forces, claiming tens of thousands of lives and plunging 26 million into severe food insecurity

UNITED NATIONS, United States: The UN’s refugee chief questioned Sunday what future awaited the Sudanese people as the country’s civil war rages, pushing its people ever further afield including to Uganda and Europe’s maritime borders.
Since the start of the war in April 2023, “well over 10 million people have been chased away from their homes,” two million of whom fled Sudan, Filippo Grandi told AFP in an interview, ahead of the annual UN General Assembly high-level week.
“What’s the future for a country like Sudan, devastated by war?” Grandi asked.
Grandi’s role leading the UNHCR and its 20,000 staff is one of the most important in the United Nations due to the ever-growing number of refugees in the world, and the agency has won the Nobel Peace Prize twice.
Grandi said it was “worrying” that “people are starting to move away from the immediate neighborhood,” describing a sharp increase of Sudanese — around 40,000 — arriving in non-bordering Uganda.
“We have seen at least 100,000 Sudanese arrive in Libya,” Grandi said.
“We know that, given the active presence of trafficking networks and also the proximity with Europe, many of them may now try, or are already trying, to take boats on to Italy and other European countries,” Grandi said.

“We have been warning the Europeans,” he added, insisting that humanitarian aid for Sudan was inadequate, and that Sudanese people would continue to leave and would reach more countries.
“This crisis is really beginning to impact the whole region in very, very risky ways.”
Chad, South Sudan, Ethiopia and the Central African Republic are home to tens of thousands of refugees, while Egypt, where many Sudanese migrants were already living, is home to millions.
Sudan’s civil war has pitted the army led by general Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan against the paramilitary RSF forces of general Mohamed Hamdane Dagalo, claiming tens of thousands of lives and plunging 26 million into severe food insecurity.
Famine has been declared in Zamzam camp in Darfur near to the city of El-Fasher, where the RSF this weekend launched a large-scale offensive after months of siege.
“We have very patchy information about the situation inside,” Grandi said.
“(But) we know that there are certain patterns” — namely that militias, sometimes linked with one of the warring parties or the RSF itself “targets or puts pressure on civilians.”
The RSF, with the support of Arab militias, have killed between 10,000 and 15,000 people in the West-Darfur town of El-Geneina alone, UN experts said.
“This most grave crisis — a crisis of human rights, a crisis of humanitarian needs — passes largely unobserved in our international community,” Grandi said.
“Every new crisis chases the other crisis away” — from Ukraine to Gaza.
But even before the deadly war in Gaza, the war in Sudan had been “marginalized” despite its massive impact, he said, condemning the “deficit of interest for crises in Africa,” like those in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Sahel, as “frightening and shocking.”
Grandi questioned the outlook for Sudan even if peace was achieved, warning that the Sudanese middle class which had “held the country together had been completely destroyed.
“They know that it’s over. They’ve lost their jobs, their homes have been destroyed,” he said.
“Many times relatives have been killed. It’s atrocious.”

 


Floods wreak havoc in Morocco’s farmlands after severe drought

An orchard of citrus trees stand in flood water in the Sidi Kacem region, in northwestern Morocco on February 5, 2026. (AFP)
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Floods wreak havoc in Morocco’s farmlands after severe drought

  • Morocco, where agriculture employs about a third of the working-age population, has seen seven consecutive years of drought
  • We have no grain left to feed our livestock, and they are our main source of income

KENITRA, Morocco: In the Moroccan village of Ouled Salama, 63-year-old farmer Mohamed Reouani waded through his crops, now submerged by floodwaters after days of heavy downpours.
Farmers in the North African kingdom have endured severe drought for the past few years.
But floods have now swamped more than 100,000 hectares of land, wiping out key crops and forcing farmers in the country’s northwest to flee with 
their livestock.
“I have about four or five hectares” of crops, Reouani said. “All of it is gone now.”
“Still, praise be to God for this blessing,” he added while looking around at the water.
Morocco, where agriculture employs about a third of the working-age population, has seen seven consecutive years of drought.
As of December, its dams were only around 30 percent full on average, and farmers have largely relied on rainwater for irrigation.
Now their average filling rate stands at nearly 70 percent after they received about 8.8 billion cubic meters of water in the last month — compared to just 9 billion over the previous two years combined.
Many like Reouani had at first rejoiced at the downpours.
But the rain eventually swelled into a heavy storm that displaced over 180,000 people as of Wednesday and killed four so far.
In his village, the water level climbed nearly 2 meters, Reouani said. Some homes still stand isolated by floodwater.
Elsewhere, residents were seen stranded on rooftops before being rescued in small boats.
Others were taken away by helicopter as roads were cut off by flooding.
Authorities have set up camps of small tents, including near the city of Kenitra, to shelter evacuees and their livestock.
“We have no grain left” to feed the animals, one evacuee, Ibrahim Bernous, 32, said at a camp. “The water 
took everything.”
Bernous, like many, now depends on animal feed distributed by the authorities, according to Mustapha Ait Bella, an official at the Agriculture Ministry.
At the camps, displaced families make do with little as they wait to return home.
“The problem is what happens after we return,” said Chergui Al-Alja, 42. 
“We have no grain left to feed our livestock, and they are our main source of income.”
On Thursday, the government announced a relief plan totaling about $330 million to aid the hardest-hit regions.
A tenth of that sum was earmarked for farmers and livestock breeders.

Rachid Benali, head of the Moroccan Confederation of Agriculture and Rural Development, said farming was “among the sectors most affected by 
the floods.”

But he said “a more accurate damage assessment was pending once the waters receded.”
Benali added that sugar beet, citrus, and vegetable farms had also been devastated by flooding.
Agriculture accounts for about 12 percent of Morocco’s overall economy.
The International Monetary Fund anticipates that the massive rainfall will help the economy grow by nearly five percent.
Authorities are betting on expanded irrigation and seawater desalination to help the sector withstand increasingly volatile climate swings.
While Morocco is no stranger to extreme weather events, scientists say that climate change driven by human activity has made phenomena such as droughts and floods more frequent and intense.
Last December, flash floods killed 37 people in Safi, in Morocco’s deadliest weather-related disaster in the past decade.
Neighboring Algeria and Tunisia have also experienced severe weather and deadly flooding in recent weeks.
Further north, Portugal and Spain have faced fresh storms and torrential rain.