Sudan’s two years of war have ‘shattered’ children’s lives: UNICEF

The number of major violations against children in Sudan, from killings to abductions, has increased by 1,000 percent following two years of civil war, UNICEF said Monday. (UNICEF)
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Updated 15 April 2025
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Sudan’s two years of war have ‘shattered’ children’s lives: UNICEF

  • The number of children in need of humanitarian assistance has doubled in two years

UNITED NATIONS, United States: The number of major violations against children in Sudan, from killings to abductions, has increased by 1,000 percent following two years of civil war, UNICEF said Monday, calling for increased global awareness.
The United Nations children’s agency said that such incidents — which also include maiming and attacks on schools and hospitals — had previously been confined to a few regions.
But the ongoing nature of the conflict between the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces and Sudan’s army had resulted in their spread to further areas.
“Two years of violence and displacement have shattered the lives of millions of children across Sudan,” UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell said in a statement.
“The number of grave violations against children has surged by 1,000 percent in two years,” the statement said.
For example, the number of children killed or maimed has increased drastically from 150 verified cases in 2022 to an estimated 2,776 across 2023 and 2024, according to figures provided to AFP by UNICEF, which are likely underestimates.
Attacks on schools and hospitals have also gone up from 33 verified cases in 2022 to around 181 over the two prior years.
Furthermore, the number of children in need of humanitarian assistance has doubled in two years, from 7.8 million at the beginning of 2023 to more than 15 million today, UNICEF said.
“Sudan is the biggest humanitarian crisis in the world today, but it is not getting the world’s attention,” Russell said, adding “we cannot abandon the children of Sudan.”
“We have the expertise and the resolve to scale up our support, but we need access and sustained funding,” she said.
The war between army chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and his former deputy, RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, first erupted in April 2023.
Since then, the conflict has left tens of thousands dead and displaced 13 million people, according to the UN.
Famine has additionally been declared in at least five locations, including the Zamzam displacement camp in Darfur, where the RSF recently wrested control.
With the arrival of the rainy season and the risk of flooding, the situation in Sudan could worsen further. According to UNICEF, this year’s rainy season could result in 462,000 children suffering severe acute malnutrition.

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US, UN launch humanitarian fund with $700m for war-ravaged Sudan

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US, UN launch humanitarian fund with $700m for war-ravaged Sudan

  • Sudanese flee to Chad but face physical and mental wounds, women grapple with rape trauma

CAIRO, TINE, CHAD: The US and the UN are seeking to rally international support for humanitarian aid to war-ravaged Sudan, kicking off a new Sudan Humanitarian Fund with $700 million.

The Trump administration said it would contribute $200 million to the initiative from a basket of $2 billion it set aside late last year to fund humanitarian projects around the world. Several other participants promised they would make pledges but did not specify amounts.

“Today we are signaling that the international community will work together to bring this suffering to an end, and to ensure lifesaving aid reaches communities in such desperate, desperate need,” said UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher, who heads the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, or OCHA. 

Fletcher co-hosted the fundraising event in Washington with US senior adviser for Arab and African affairs Massad Boulos.

Fletcher said they have set the beginning of Ramadan, on Feb. 17, as a date “to make visible progress on this work.”

Boulos said the US has put forward a “comprehensive proposal” for a humanitarian truce that could be agreed on in the next few weeks.

Sudan has been in the throes of war since 2023, with the Rapid Support Forces paramilitary force and the Sudanese military clashing for power over the country.  The UN estimates that over 40,000 people have been killed in the war, but consider that the true number could be many times higher.

The conflict created the world’s largest humanitarian crisis, with over 14 million people forced to flee their homes and with famine declared in several regions of Sudan.

Fighting has concentrated in the Kordofan regions recently after the RSF took over El-Fasher, one of the army’s last strongholds in the Darfur region. But the military has since been making gains in Kordofan by breaking a siege in Kadugli and the neighboring town of Dilling. On Tuesday, the Sudanese military announced that it had opened a crucial road between Kadugli and Dilling.

The RSF launched a drone attack Tuesday that hit a medical center in Kadugli, killing 15 people including seven children, according to Sudan Doctors Network, which tracks the war. Meanwhile, in Tine, neighboring Chad, medical staff treated refugee Mahamat Hamid Abakar for a serious head wound from a drone attack using bandages and compresses outside the city hospital.

The 33-year-old, who fled his native Sudan as war erupted nearly three years ago, had just had a 5 mm metal fragment removed from his skull. Most of the wounded crossing the border are victims of drones, which have been heavily deployed by both sides in the conflict.

Sitting in the back of a pick-up truck, Abakar was traveling at night to deliver flour and sugar from Chad to his family who have stayed in Sudan.

“I was attacked by a drone in the area of Um Baru in Sudan three days ago,” he said, despite difficulties in talking.

Three other occupants of the vehicle — two men and a woman — were burned to death in the explosion.

The travel companion seated next to him died from his injuries the next morning, shortly after being picked up by rescue teams, who transported them to the Chadian border 150 km away.

Set on a hill overlooking a parched river marking the border, the hospital at Tine is on the front line for receiving wounded Sudanese.

“Since the capture of El-Fasher at the end of October, we have taken in a thousand Sudanese,” said Awadallah Yassine Mahamat, a carer from Sudan’s western region of Darfur who volunteers at the hospital after fleeing to Tine a year and a half ago.

El Fasher is the state capital of North Darfur.

“In Darfur, many hospitals, health centers and even pharmacies were destroyed during fighting,” he said, showing photographs on his phone of emaciated and charred bodies at the hospital where he worked before leaving.

Dressed in a thick, black jacket, the man in his 40s said most victims arriving in Chad had fractures following drone attacks.

In recent weeks, the wounded have flooded in from border areas being attacked by RSF forces.

Abakar Abdallah Kahwaya and Mahamat Abakar Hamdan, both aged 27, said they had been fighting for an army-aligned faction led by Darfur Gov. Minni Minnawi.

They have been in hospital for two weeks after being wounded during clashes with the RSF in Girgira, a Sudanese town about 50 km south of Tine.

“We put down our weapons to enter Chad and receive treatment,” said Kahwaya, who has an abdomen wound. “But as soon as we can fight again, we’ll return to Sudan,” Hamdan added.

Mahamat, the volunteer caregiver, stressed that the hospital accepted anyone who was wounded, whether civilian or combatant — but acknowledged the limits of the care the hospital was able to give.

“We’re short on caregivers and they are not sufficiently trained to care for all the wounded,” he said.

But the wounds are not only physical — treating the mental distress of refugees poses a significant challenge.

“The lack of resources and prospects in the camps further increases their vulnerability,” said Kindi Hassan, a mental health official with the International Rescue Committee at the Goudrane camp, which accommodates around 60,000 refugees.

Hassan was helping 30-year-old Asma who escaped an RSF attack on Zamzam, the largest refugee camp in North Darfur, in April.

In tears, the woman recounted the day she spent holed up in a makeshift bunker dug beneath her home before managing to get out of the camp.

She left behind the bodies of 11 family members killed in a bombing.

“Soldiers arrested me and three friends as we were fleeing,” she said, wiping away the tears with her headscarf.

“They beat us with the butts of their rifles until we couldn’t walk anymore and took turns raping us until the morning,” she said.

Medicine now helps to keep at bay the images that had haunted her and stopped her sleeping.

“Mental health is stigmatized and most cases of post-traumatic stress are kept quiet,” Hassan, of the IRC, said.

She said refugees waited a long time before talking about their trauma, adding: “Our response is inadequate to meet the enormous needs.”

Four NGOs are caring for the mental health of victims of conflict in Goudrane camp, including the IRC, which has helped almost 800 people in a year.

If additional resources don’t arrive, the plight of refugees in Chad’s camps risks worsening, warned Hassan, who spoke of an increasing trend of “suicidal thoughts.”

“Some people even go so far as to poison or hang themselves to escape their distress,” she said.