Can citizen-led clinics fill the void left in Sudan’s shattered health system?

A child infected with cholera receives treatment in the cholera isolation centre at the refugee camps of western Sudan, in Tawila city in Darfur, on August 12, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 08 December 2025
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Can citizen-led clinics fill the void left in Sudan’s shattered health system?

  • Grassroots initiatives like Nubia Health are filling critical gaps, as Sudan’s health system collapses and international aid remains minimal
  • Diaspora-backed models are emerging as resilient alternatives, offering sustainable, community-based care in place of state structures

LONDON: As Sudan’s war forces millions to flee, the remote frontier town of Wadi Halfa, near the Egyptian border, has become a bottleneck for displaced families — and a focal point of the country’s spiraling public health crisis.

Where trauma, hunger, and war wounds converge daily, one clinic is offering desperate families much-needed respite. Grassroots health initiatives like this are filling the gaps where state and international aid agencies have fallen short.

Since April 2023, when a violent power struggle between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces plunged the country into civil war, Sudan has faced a multi-layered catastrophe.

More than 12 million people have been displaced, and the conflict between the SAF and RSF — which some estimates suggest has killed over 150,000 — has triggered the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.

In Northern State, Wadi Halfa has transformed from a sleepy border town into a safe haven for thousands of people on the move. 




Staff at Nubia Health Center, Wadi Halfa. (Supplied)

Here, a grassroots, diaspora-supported facility — Nubia Health — is offering a community-based model of care built to withstand the collapse of the national health system.

Dr. Majdi Osman, a doctor and scientist at the University of Cambridge and the founder of Nubia Health, recently returned from Sudan and noted that the city’s population had “grown so much” since his last visit.

“So many of the people who were there have come from other parts of Sudan, from Khartoum and from Darfur and Blue Nile, the Nuba Mountains. The city itself has become much more diverse,” he said.

Many new arrivals, including doctors, had originally intended to reach Egypt, which now hosts the largest share of Sudanese refugees. Instead, they remained in Wadi Halfa, giving the town newfound status as a place of refuge.

Despite the sanctuary it offers, signs of war are everywhere. Osman said that while the conflict has not reached Wadi Halfa directly, a heavy military presence is felt through checkpoints and a 10 p.m. curfew. 




Darfur IDPs arriving in Northern State. (Supplied)

Even here, he said, “you do feel like life is very different to how it once was before the war, where it was much freer and people could congregate and move around freely.”

The new arrivals carry the hidden scars of a brutal conflict, but it is often medical emergencies — chronic, unmanaged, and severe — that finally force families to flee.

Osman described one family who stayed in Khartoum for months despite the violence, only moving north when a dire health crisis struck. One of their children appeared to have leukemia and was deteriorating rapidly, while the mother, who had severe kidney disease, needed dialysis.

“Eventually they were able to transfer their son through to Egypt to get treatment, but the rest of the family stayed in Sudan because they couldn’t move over,” he said.

Such trauma is widespread. Health emergencies are “triggering their need to move to Wadi Halfa,” he said, leading to “families separated because of the medical needs of one or two members of the family.” 




Nubia Health Center. (Supplied)

Maternal health has also suffered devastating blows. Osman recounted the story of an expectant mother who “unfortunately went into labor early and lost her child” while fleeing to Wadi Halfa. Now pregnant again, her hope is simply to deliver safely and raise her baby with access to basic child healthcare.

Beyond injuries and chronic illness, the collapse of supply chains has produced severe, preventable health crises. Osman recalled meeting a teacher whose student had gone blind from untreated Vitamin A deficiency — “something that you only hear or read about in the UK in medical textbooks.”

He said the health effects of the war are “very obvious,” and that the absence of medical support appears in “every conversation.”

The tragedies unfolding in Wadi Halfa reflect a national health system in free fall. Even before the war, decades of underinvestment left Sudan’s system fragile, with 70 percent of healthcare providers concentrated in Khartoum, which serves just 20 percent of the population.

Since fighting began, fewer than 30 percent of health facilities remain functional. 




The clinic provides a vital range of services, from managing chronic conditions such as hypertension and diabetes to treating respiratory infections, diarrheal disease, and seasonal malaria. (Supplied)

The World Health Organization has verified 198 attacks on health infrastructure since April 2023, resulting in 1,735 health workers and patients killed, and 438 wounded.

Hospitals have been looted, bombed, and militarized, including the occupation of Al-Nuhud Hospital in West Kordofan. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has said such attacks “must stop.”

The public health crisis is now spiraling. Medecins Sans Frontieres teams report extreme levels of acute malnutrition, finding that more than 70 percent of children under 5 who fled El-Fasher were acutely malnourished.

Malnutrition is also widespread in Khartoum and Blue Nile, driven by “inadequate food, disease, insecurity, lack of livelihoods and unsafe living conditions.”

Cholera, measles, and malaria are spreading rapidly. Since cholera’s resurgence in July 2024, more than 83,000 cases and 2,100 deaths have been reported. Immunization coverage has fallen to its lowest level in 40 years. 




A Sudanese child waits her turn during a campaign responding to the polio epidemic and for the elimination of vitamin A deficiency, launched with the support of UNICEF, targeting the innoculation of more than 12,000 children from 6 months-old to 5-years-old, in Gedaref state in eastern Sudan on June 9, 2024. (AFP)

Women and children are bearing the heaviest burden. Maternal, newborn, and child health services typically collapse early in conflict, and pregnant women are increasingly giving birth without skilled attendants.

Even before the war, the UN Children’s Fund estimated that 78,000 children under 5 were dying annually from preventable causes — a number expected to triple.

Gender-based violence is also surging, with reports of rape used systematically as a weapon of war, including against very young girls. Survivors have almost no access to mental health or protection services.

In this vacuum, grassroots initiatives such as Nubia Health are emerging as resilient new models.

Osman described his shock upon returning to Sudan last month expecting a major international humanitarian presence responding to “the largest humanitarian disaster in the world at the moment.” Instead, he found “there’s nothing.” 




A sanitation worker sprays disinfectant, part of a campaign by Sudan's Health Ministry to combat the spread of disease, in Kassala state in eastern Sudan on August 20, 2024. (AFP)

Support was instead coming from ordinary Sudanese. “It’s just people in the neighborhoods providing support to each other. Many houses in Wadi Halfa were just hosting refugees.”

This reality underscores the importance of the Nubia Health model, centered on community ownership and long-term sustainability.

Though based in Wadi Halfa, the organization aims to scale community health programs nationwide, ensuring people can access basic care with dignity and safety.

Dr. Khalil, the director of Nubia Health, highlighted the effectiveness of the model.

“Sudanese-run and diaspora-supported clinics like ours play an important role in expanding access to reliable, community-based healthcare,” he said. 




Cholera infected patients receive treatment in the cholera isolation centre at the refugee camps of western Sudan, in Tawila city in Darfur, on August 14, 2025. (AFP)

“We combine local knowledge and trust with the technical and financial support of our diaspora colleagues.”

The clinic provides a vital range of services, from managing chronic conditions such as hypertension and diabetes to treating respiratory infections, diarrheal disease, and seasonal malaria.

Khalil said many pregnant women face anemia, delayed antenatal visits, and limited follow-up. The clinic provides antenatal care throughout pregnancy and is establishing pathways to ensure safer deliveries.

Recognizing widespread depression and post-traumatic stress disorder linked to the war, the center also employs a psychologist.

Osman said they will work with the International Organization for Migration and UNICEF to support survivors of gender-based violence, offering both medical and psychological care. 




A boy looks on as another is vaccinated against diphtheria at the Al-Afad camp for displaced people in the town of Al-Dabba, northern Sudan, on November 22, 2025. (AFP)

Nubia Health is also expanding its community health worker program. They are “training community health workers, scaling that to reach several hundred thousand people, meet them at their homes, provide education and early diagnosis and screening and treatment of diseases like malnutrition, early lung infections, malaria.”

Still, the challenges are immense. Khalil said the main obstacles include “achieving stable funding and securing essential equipment and supplies. We also need to adapt to logistical and security constraints in the region.”

Meanwhile, the UN’s Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan for Sudan is just 23 percent funded, despite nearly 26 million people needing assistance.

Yet Osman remains motivated by the dedication of Sudanese staff.

His greatest hope, he said, comes not from the facility itself but from the 50 workers who have rallied around it — an “amazing group of young people” who have built a health center in the middle of a war and are becoming “pillars of the community.” 




The clinic provides a vital range of services, from managing chronic conditions such as hypertension and diabetes to treating respiratory infections, diarrheal disease, and seasonal malaria. (Supplied)

“The one thing that diaspora can have is that commitment to always try and do everything possible to support people back home in this,” he said.

Sudan, he stressed, does not lack doctors — it lacks the systems that allow them to serve. Nubia Health aims to provide that missing infrastructure.

In a final reflection, Osman emphasized their commitment to evidence-based practice.

“Research isn’t necessarily something that should be restricted to lofty academic institutions,” he said, “but we also have a commitment, we believe, to understand whether what we’re doing is improving health outcomes.”

For now, the Nubia Health Center stands as a beacon of dignity and care — a community-driven model offering a fragile but vital safety net for a people whose suffering has been largely sidelined by the world.

 


Lifting sanctions on Syria will prevent Daesh resurgence and strengthen the nation, experts say

Updated 11 December 2025
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Lifting sanctions on Syria will prevent Daesh resurgence and strengthen the nation, experts say

  • Conference in Washington discusses effects US policies are having on post-Assad Syria, and the continuing economic hardships in the country that could fuel terrorism
  • Participants praise US President Donald Trump for taking the right steps to help the war-torn nation move towards recovery and stabilization

Syria faces serious challenges in the aftermath of the fall of the Assad regime a year ago, including rebuilding its economy, lifting refugees and civilians out of poverty, and preventing a resurgence of Daesh terrorism.

But experts in two panel discussions during a conference at the Middle East Institute in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, attended by Arab News, agreed that US President Donald Trump had so far taken all the right steps to help the war-torn nation move toward recovery and stabilization.

One of the discussions explored the effects American policies are having on the rebuilding of Syria, including the lifting of sanctions and efforts to attract outside investments and stabilize the economy. Moderated by the institute’s vice president for policy, Kenneth Pollack, the participants included retired ambassadors Robert Ford and Barbara Leaf, and Charles Lister, a resident fellow at the institute.

The other discussion focused on the continuing economic hardships in Syria that could fuel terrorism, including a resurgence of Daesh. Moderator Elizabeth Hagedorn, of Washington-based Middle East news website Al-Monitor, was joined by Mohammed Alaa Ghanem of the Syrian American Council, Celine Kasem of Syria Now, and Jay Salkini from the US-Syria Business Council.

“As we went into a transitional era, US diplomacy took a back step for a while as the Trump administration came into office,” Lister noted during the first panel discussion.

Everyone has been “super skeptical” of where the new government led by President Ahmad Al-Sharaa, a former commander with the Syrian opposition forces, would lead the country, he said, but Trump had stepped up through policies and support.

“Frankly, I think in January none of us expected that President Donald Trump would be shaking hands with Ahmad Al-Sharaa” a few months later, he added.

“Despite the obvious challenges, this new (Syrian) government has to be engaged.”

The US had maintained strong ties to the Syrian Democratic Forces, and with Al-Sharaa’s Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham, Lister said, in the decade leading up to the collapse of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime on Dec. 8, 2024.

“Of course, we’ve had 10 years of a superb partnership with the Syrian Democratic Forces, but they were a non-state actor not a sovereign government,” he continued.

“Now, we have a sovereign government that we could test, we can engage, and we can see where that goes. And in working through a sovereign government, there is no comparison that comes anywhere close to what we’ve seen on Syria.”

Lister praised Trump, saying: “I think a lot of that goes down to President Trump’s own kind of gut instinct of the way to do things.

“But there is a deeper, deeper government bench that has worked on this through Treasury and State and elsewhere. I think they all deserve credit for moving so rapidly and so boldly to give Syria a chance, as President Trump says.”

Ford said a key aspect of the process as Syria moves forward will be the removal of all sanctions imposed by the US against the Assad regime under the 2019 Caesar Act, an effort that is now underway in Congress.

He said Trump recognizes that the future of Syria and the wider Middle East lies in the hands of the Arab people, and has pursued policies based on “shared interests” including a “national security

strategy” to help the war-torn country shift away from extremism and violence toward a productive economy and safer environment for its people.

The Trump administration recognizes this reality, Ford added, and will “work on a practical level towards shared interests.”

However, he cautioned that “Syria is not out of the woods, by any stretch of the imagination” in terms of ensuring there is no resurgence of violence driven by desperate people burdened by the harsh economic realities in the country.

“If they can work with the Syrian government, and with more and more important regional actors as the United States retrenches — like Israel, Turkiye, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Egypt; it’s a long list — it will become more important,” Ford said.

“There is still a way for the Americans to work with all of them, even if we don’t have big boots on the ground, or if we’re not providing billions of dollars.”

Nonetheless, “America’s voice will still be heard,” he added, thanks to the interest Trump is taking in Syria.

Adopted by Congress six years ago, toward the end of Trump’s first term as president, the Caesar Act imposed wide-ranging sanctions on Syria, including measures that targeted Assad and his family in an attempt to ensure his regime would be held accountable for war crimes committed under its reign. The act was named after a photographer who leaked images of torture taking place in Assad’s prisons.

Lister noted that the removal of the US sanctions has been progressing at “record-breaking speeds.”

In pre-taped opening remarks to the conference, which took place at the institute’s offices in Washington, Adm. Brad Cooper, commander of the US Central Command, said the Trump administration’s priority in Syria is the “aggressive and relentless pursuit” of Daesh, while working on the integration of the Syrian Democratic Forces with the new Syrian government through American military coordination.

“Just to give an example, in the month of October, US forces advised, assisted and enabled Syrian partners during more than 20 operations against (Daesh), diminishing the terrorists’ attacks and export of violence around the world,” he said. “We’re also degrading their ability to regenerate.”

Cooper added that the issue of displacement camps in northeastern Syria must also be addressed. He said he has visited Al-Hawl camp four times since his first meeting with Al-Sharaa, “which reinforced my view of the need to accelerate repatriations.”

He continued: “The impact on displaced persons devastated by years of war and repression has been immense. As I mentioned in a late-September speech at the UN, continuing to repatriate displaced persons and detainees in Syria is both a humanitarian imperative and a strategic necessity.”

The US is working with Syrian forces to “supercharge” this effort, Cooper said, noting that the populations of Al-Hawl and Al-Roj camps have fallen from 70,000 to about 26,000.

The second panel discussion painted a very bleak picture of the economic challenges the Syrian people face, with the average income only $200-$300 a month, a level that the experts warned could push desperate people to violence just to survive.

The US-Syria Business Council’s Salkini said many major companies and factories that once operated in Syria had relocated to neighboring countries such as Lebanon, Iraq and Turkiye.

“We’re looking at about 50 percent-plus unemployment,” he said. “Let me give you statistics on the wages: A factory worker today, his salary is $100-$300 a month. A farmer makes $75-$200 a month in salary. A manager (or) a private in the military makes $250 a month.

“So you can imagine how these people are living on these low wages, and still have to buy their iPhone, their internet, pay for electricity.”

Many displaced people are unable to return to their former homes, the panelists said, because they were destroyed during the war and there is no accessible construction industry to rebuild them.

The capital, Damascus, faces many challenges they added, and the situation is even worse in the country.