Fleeing Sudan war, at any cost

Unexploded ordnance lie on the ground on a street, after the Sudanese army deepened its control over Khartoum from the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), Sudan April 27, 2025. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 25 July 2025
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Fleeing Sudan war, at any cost

  • Over 10 million have been displaced inside the country, according to UN figures
  • The Mixed Migration Center, a research and policy organization, reported a 20 percent increase in the number of Sudanese trying to reach Europe via Libya this year

KHARTOUM: Stalked by war and hunger for two years, more and more Sudanese civilians are desperately seeking safety in Europe, braving perilous crossings of the Libyan desert and the Mediterranean Sea.

More than four million Sudanese have fled abroad since the war between the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) erupted in 2023. Over 10 million more have been displaced inside the country, according to UN figures.

The Mixed Migration Center, a research and policy organization, reported a 20 percent increase in the number of Sudanese trying to reach Europe via Libya this year.

AFP has gathered firsthand accounts from those scattered along the route — some still waiting for a way out, others stuck in Libya and a few who have reached the relative safety of Europe but remain haunted by what they left behind.

Ibrahim Yassin, 20, left eastern Sudan in December 2023, “hoping to reach Libya, and then Europe.”

“The journey across the desert was hellish... extreme thirst and entire days without food.”

In Libya, smugglers demanded $3,000 to continue his journey. Unable to pay, he fled to Tripoli, “hoping to find another opportunity.”

In Tripoli, a second group offered a sea crossing for $3,500, which his relatives sent after selling the family home in Sudan.

“We sailed for eight hours, before the Libyan coast guard caught us and put us in jail.”

Another $1,000 secured his release. His second attempt ended the same way.

Now, he is stranded in Tripoli — broke, undocumented and out of options.

“Now I’m lost,” he said. “No papers, no way back to Sudan and no way to reach Europe.”

Naima Azhari, 35, was living with her husband and daughter in Soba, south of Khartoum, when the war erupted.

“I thought it would last a week or two. But when the RSF took control of Khartoum, we realized there was no hope.”

In August 2023, they set out for Libya. The 10-day journey was fraught with danger.

“At every checkpoint, you pay a bribe or they threaten you. We went from one militia zone to another.”

But Tripoli offered no relief. “No stability. No jobs. Libya was even harder than the war itself.”

Naima considered returning to Sudan, but there was no safe route.

In October 2024, the family moved again — this time to Egypt, where they finally found “a better life.”

Until June 2023, Hassan, a 40-year-old civil servant, lived quietly with his wife and three children in the Darfur city of Geneina.

But then the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces began targeting the Masalit ethnic minority to which he belongs.

“They assassinated governor Khamis Abakar, who I was close to,” Hasan recalled, asking that his real name be withheld for safety reasons.

He said he and others were detained when they spoke out.

“We were beaten and tortured. They said: ‘Slaves, we have to get rid of you’.”

In January, the United States determined that the RSF had “committed genocide” in Darfur with their “systematic” targeting of ethnic minorities including the Masalit.

Hassan escaped across the desert into Libya, where he was held for two months in “an overcrowded place where migrants are exploited, insulted and beaten.”

He eventually boarded a boat and spent two days at sea before landing in Italy.

From there, he made his way to France, where he sought political asylum. Now employed in a factory, he is trying to locate his children.

“Someone on Facebook told me they were in a refugee camp in Chad. I started the process of bringing them here, but unfortunately they have no documents.

“I can’t return to Sudan, I have to bring them here. That’s my only goal now.”

Abdelaziz Bashir, 42, once lived a modest but stable life in the city of Omdurman, just across the Nile from Khartoum.

“Everything changed in an instant,” forcing him to flee to the eastern city of Gedaref with his family.

Though now technically safe, “I’m just sitting around, there’s no work, and the economic situation gets worse every day.”

Unable to provide for his family, he has set his sights on reaching Europe.

“I know the road is dangerous, that I could die in the desert or at sea, but I have no other choice.

“It’s my only hope. If I succeed, I can change my family’s life. If I fail, at least I will have tried.”


Sudan paramilitary seizes key oil field: engineer

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Sudan paramilitary seizes key oil field: engineer

  • Sudan’s energy and petroleum ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the reported capture of the Heglig field
  • The Heglig field is the country’s largest, and is also the main processing facility for South Sudan’s oil exports
PORT SUDAN, Sudan: An engineer at Sudan’s largest oil field said Monday that the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces had seized the facility along the country’s southern border, forcing the evacuation of its staff.
Sudan’s energy and petroleum ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the reported capture of the Heglig field, located in the resource-rich Kordofan region.
“This morning the RSF took control of the field. Our technical teams shut it down and halted production, and the workers were evacuated to South Sudan,” the engineer said by phone from across the border.
Since April of 2023, the RSF has been waging a war with the regular army that has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced 12 million more and decimated the country’s already fragile infrastructure.
The Heglig field is the country’s largest, and is also the main processing facility for South Sudan’s oil exports, which make up nearly all of Juba’s government revenue.
“The processing plant near the field through which South Sudanese oil passes was also shut down,” the engineer said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.
The army has repeatedly accused the RSF of launching drone strikes on Heglig, prompting authorities to temporarily suspend operations there in August.
Heglig lies in the far south of Sudan’s Kordofan region, which has seen fierce fighting in recent weeks as the two sides wrestle for territory.
A drone attack in South Kordofan state blamed on the RSF hit a kindergarten and a hospital last week, killing dozens of civilians, including children, according to a local official and army-aligned foreign ministry.
In October, the RSF pushed army troops out of their last position in the western Darfur region, putting the military on the defensive as it tries to halt the paramilitary advance through Kordofan and back toward the capital Khartoum.
Sudan is now effectively split in two, with the army holding the north, east and center, and the RSF in control of the west and, with the help of its allies, swathes of the south.