Women bearing brunt of Sudan’s acute hunger crisis, UN says

Houda Ali Mohammed, 32, a displaced Sudanese mother of four, prepares food at a camp shelter amid the ongoing conflict between the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and the Sudanese army, in Tawila, North Darfur, Sudan, July 30, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 09 January 2026
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Women bearing brunt of Sudan’s acute hunger crisis, UN says

  • Germany plans to host aid conference around anniversary of 2023 outbreak of civil war in April

GENEVA: Women are bearing the brunt of the humanitarian crisis in Sudan, with the majority of female-headed households not having enough food to eat, the UN said on Friday.

“Female-headed households are now three times more likely to be food insecure. Three-quarters of these households report not having enough to eat,” Jens Laerke, spokesperson for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, or OCHA, said in ‌Geneva.

“Hunger is ‌becoming increasingly gendered,” he added, pointing ‌to pre-existing gender ‌inequalities in the country being exacerbated by the ongoing conflict, which entered its 1,000th day on Friday. 

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More than 100,000 are estimated to have fled El-Fasher since the Rapid Support Forces took control there following an 18-month siege.

UN Women has previously warned that women face the risk of sexual violence while searching for food.

UN agencies called for immediate international action to provide aid to the Darfur city of El-Fasher, taken by the Rapid Support Forces ‌in late October, as well as to Kadugli, another besieged city in Sudan’s south. Both cities are facing famine.

More than 100,000 are estimated to have fled El-Fasher since the RSF took control there following an 18-month siege.

OCHA said it is seeking to make Sudan the first country to sign an agreement with the US to receive part of the $2 billion in assistance it pledged at the end of December.

More than 21 million people are currently estimated to be acutely food insecure across the country. Some 34 million people are in need of humanitarian support, half of whom are children, according to the UN.

OCHA said it did not yet have an update on plans to return to El-Fasher, following international aid staff’s initial assessment of the city in December, since its takeover by the RSF.

Germany plans to host a Sudan aid conference in the spring to raise emergency relief funds.

The conference would be held around the anniversary of the 2023 outbreak of the civil war in April, a Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said.

“Today, the world commemorates a sad date: 1,000 days of war in Sudan,” she said in Berlin.

“Far too many people continue to suffer and die there, victims of hunger, thirst, displacement, and rape.” Previous Sudan aid conferences were held in Paris in 2024 and London in 2025.

“The world’s largest humanitarian crisis has already driven millions of civilians into poverty and many tens of thousands to their deaths,” the spokeswoman said.

“Germany is doing everything in its power, both politically and in humanitarian terms, to help the people on the ground and to end the fighting.”

 


Israel agrees to ‘limited reopening’ of Rafah crossing: PM’s office

Updated 26 January 2026
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Israel agrees to ‘limited reopening’ of Rafah crossing: PM’s office

  • The announcement came after visiting US envoys reportedly pressed Israeli officials to reopen the crossing, a vital entry point for aid into Gaza

JERUSALEM: Israel said Monday it would allow a “limited reopening” of the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt once it had recovered the remains of the last hostage in the Palestinian territory.
The announcement came after visiting US envoys reportedly pressed Israeli officials to reopen the crossing, a vital entry point for aid into Gaza.
Reopening Rafah forms part of a Gaza truce framework announced by US President Donald Trump in October, but the crossing has remained closed after Israeli forces took control of it during the war.
The Israeli military also said it was searching a cemetery in the Gaza Strip on Sunday for the remains of the last hostage, Ran Gvili, a non-commissioned officer in the police’s elite Yassam unit.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said the reopening would depend on “the return of all living hostages and a 100 percent effort by Hamas to locate and return all deceased hostages,” Netanyahu’s office said on X.
It said Israel’s military was “currently conducting a focused operation to exhaust all of the intelligence that has been gathered in the effort to locate and return” Gvili’s body.
“Upon completion of this operation, and in accordance with what has been agreed upon with the US, Israel will open the Rafah Crossing,” it said.