Hundreds of children separated from families while fleeing violence in Sudan’s west Darfur

Sudanese women who fled El-Fasher line up to receive humanitarian aid at the Al-Afad camp for displaced people in the town of Al-Dabba, northern Sudan. (AFP)
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Updated 28 November 2025
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Hundreds of children separated from families while fleeing violence in Sudan’s west Darfur

  • UNICEF recorded the arrival of 354 children without immediate family members in a refugee camp in Tawila

CAIRO: Hundreds of children have arrived in a refugee camp without their families as thousands of people fled violence in the Sudanese city of el-Fasher in the past month, with more children disconnected from their families arriving every day, officials said.
The UN said more than 100,000 people fled el-Fasher in western Darfur beginning in late October when the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces took back el-Fasher from the Sudanese army.
UNICEF recorded the arrival of 354 children without immediate family members in a refugee camp in Tawila, about 70 kilometers (43 miles) west of el-Fasher, between Oct. 26 and Nov. 22. Their parents disappeared or were detained or killed along the way, officials said.
UNICEF, the UN’s child protection agency, said Friday that 84 children were reunited over the past month with their families, mostly in Tawila where many international aid organizations are providing assistance to people impacted by the fighting in el-Fasher, the North Darfur capital seized by the RSF last month.
The Norwegian Refugee Council said at least 400 children have arrived to Tawila without their parents. Some reached the camp with the help of extended relatives, neighbors and strangers who didn’t want to leave them alone in the desert or el-Fasher, NRC advocacy manager Mathilde Vu said Thursday.
“Many children arrived with clear signs of hunger, extremely skinny. They’re so bony, dehydrated,” she said, adding that some show psychological distress including becoming restless, mute or withdrawn, crying constantly, describing nightmares or getting into fights.
The latest mass displacement began when the RSF left hundreds dead in el-Fasher, which was the Sudanese army’s last stronghold. The war between the RSF and the military began in 2023, when tensions erupted between the two former allies that were meant to oversee a democratic transition after a 2019 uprising.
The World Health Organization said fighting has killed at least 40,000 people and displaced 12 million. However, aid groups say the true death toll could be many times higher.
Sheldon Yett, UNICEF’s representative in Sudan, described the children arriving in the camp as “bewildered, malnourished and dehydrated.”
“The issue is the extreme violence that many of these children witnessed is just astounding to me. Seeing their mothers disappear and, in some cases, family members are being shot. It’sjust it’s beyond anything I’ve heard,” Yett said Friday.
Though the children have received psychological support from aid workers, some still sleep on the ground and barely have one meal each day, Vu of the NRC said.
“People are hungry, thirsty, they need education, they need help care, they need psychosocial support and we need to give them now and not wait for peace to come into Sudan,” Vu said.
The RSF is largely made up of fighters from the Arab Janjaweed militia, which is accused of carrying out a government-backed genocidal campaign in Darfur in the 2000s in which around 300,000 people were killed.
Earlier this month, the RSF agreed to a humanitarian truce proposed by a US-led mediator group, but Sudan’s military said the RSF must completely withdraw from civilian areas and disarm.
US President Donald Trump previously said he plans to push for an end to Sudan’s war after being urged to take action by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.


Israeli strikes killed eight people in south Lebanon: state media

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Israeli strikes killed eight people in south Lebanon: state media

  • Israeli strikes killed eight people in Lebanon on Thursday as Israel renewed its evacuation call for vast areas of the country’s south, long a stronghold of Hezbollah

BEIRUT: Israeli strikes killed eight people in Lebanon on Thursday as Israel renewed its evacuation call for vast areas of the country’s south, long a stronghold of Hezbollah.
The Iran-backed militant group, which dragged Lebanon into the regional war on Monday when it launched an attack on Israel, said it had launched missiles at positions in the Galilee area.
The National News Agency (NNA) reported that the mayor of a village in the Nabatieh region of south Lebanon and his wife were killed in one strike, while in a nearby village another strike killed two children and their parents.
The Lebanese health ministry said two people were killed by a strike on a car near the city of Zahle in the east of the country.
There were new strikes on the southern suburbs of the capital, Hezbollah’s main bastion, early on Thursday, NNA reported, with AFPTV footage showing smoke coming from the area.
It also said a pre-dawn Israeli drone strike hit an apartment in Beddawi, a Palestinian refugee camp near Tripoli in the north of Lebanon, killing senior Hamas official Wassim Atallah Al-Ali and his wife.
Also on Thursday, Israel renewed its warning to residents of hundreds of square kilometers (miles) of southern Lebanon to evacuate because of military action.
Arabic-language spokesman for the Israeli military Avichay Adraee posted on X: “Urgent warning to residents of southern Lebanon: you must immediately continue evacuating to the north of the Litani river.”
The warning included the cities of Tyre and Bint Jbeil.
On Tuesday, Israel’s military said it was creating a buffer zone inside Lebanon to protect Israeli residents.
The following day, it said troops from three divisions, including infantry, armored and engineering units were operating inside Lebanon.