‘No food, nothing’: Famine grips Sudan

‘No food, nothing’: Famine grips Sudan
People queue for water in Omdurman, the Sudanese capital's twin city, during battles between the Sudanese military forces and paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), on January 17, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 29 January 2025

‘No food, nothing’: Famine grips Sudan

‘No food, nothing’: Famine grips Sudan
  • Country’s economy bludgeoned by war and mismanagement

CAIRO: Mona Ibrahim has already buried two of her children.

In the span of just two months, the Sudanese mother watched helplessly as severe malnutrition killed her 10-year-old daughter, Rania, and her eight-month-old son, Montasir, in the famine-stricken Zamzam displacement camp.

“I could only hold them as they faded away,” Ibrahim, 40, said via video call, sitting outside her straw-and-plastic shelter near North Darfur state’s besieged capital El-Fasher.

Rania was the first to succumb. In El-Fasher’s only functioning hospital, understaffed and unequipped, she died in November just three days after being admitted with acute diarrhea.

Her baby boy Montasir followed weeks later, his tiny body bloated from severe malnutrition.

El-Fasher, under paramilitary siege since May, is only one grim battlefield in the 21-month war between the Sudanese army and the Rapid Support Forces.

In July, a UN-backed review declared famine in Zamzam, a decades-old displacement camp home to between 500,000 and a million people.

By December, it had spread to two more camps in the area, Abu Shouk and Al-Salam, as well as parts of the Nuba Mountains in southern Sudan, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification determined.

Now, Ibrahim fears for her four-year-old daughter, Rashida, who battles severe anemia with no access to medical care.

“I am terrified I will lose her too,” she said. “We’re abandoned. There is no food, no medicine, nothing.”

At Salam 56, one of Zamzam’s 48 overcrowded shelters, exhaustion was etched onto mothers’ faces as they cradled their children, too weak to stand.

Multiple families gathered around bowls with a few scraps of peanut residue traditionally used as animal feed. “It’s all we have,” said Rawiya Ali, a 35-year-old mother of five.

Contaminated water collects in a shallow reservoir during the rainy season, which the women trudge 3 km to fetch.

“Animals drink from it and so do we,” Ali said.

Salam 56 is home to over 700 families, according to its coordinator Adam Mahmoud Abdullah.

Since war began in April 2023, it has received only four food aid deliveries, the most recent in September, a mere 10 tonnes of flour, he said. “Since then, nothing has come,” Abdullah said.

The desolation in Zamzam lays bare the true cost of the war, which has killed tens of thousands of people, uprooted over 12 million others, and created the “biggest humanitarian crisis ever recorded,” according to the International Rescue Committee. About 700 km southeast of Zamzam, the situation was just as dire.

Outside one of the last functioning community kitchens in the town of Dilling in South Kordofan state, queues stretched endlessly, according to Nazik Kabalo, who leads a Sudanese women’s rights group overseeing the kitchen.

Photos show men, women and children standing hollow-eyed and frail — their bellies swollen and skin pulled taut over fragile bones. 

After days without a single morsel, “some collapse where they stand,” Kabalo said. “For others, even when they get food ... they vomit it back up,” she said.

In South Kordofan state, where agriculture once thrived, farmers are eating seeds meant for planting, while others boil tree leaves in water to stave off hunger.

“We are seeing hunger in areas that have never seen famine in Sudan’s history,” Kabalo said.

With vast oil and gold reserves and fertile agricultural land, Sudan has had its economy bludgeoned by war and decades of mismanagement, and now, hunger is everywhere.


Hamas military leader rejects US peace deal: BBC

Smoke rises during an Israeli military operation in Gaza City, as seen from the central Gaza Strip, October 2, 2025. (Reuters)
Smoke rises during an Israeli military operation in Gaza City, as seen from the central Gaza Strip, October 2, 2025. (Reuters)
Updated 7 sec ago

Hamas military leader rejects US peace deal: BBC

Smoke rises during an Israeli military operation in Gaza City, as seen from the central Gaza Strip, October 2, 2025. (Reuters)
  • Izz Al-Din Al-Haddad reportedly believes plan is attempt to destroy group
  • Netanyahu: Israel will ‘forcibly resist’ creation of Palestinian state

LONDON: The leader of the military wing of Hamas in Gaza has rejected a US peace proposal, the BBC reported on Thursday.

Izz Al-Din Al-Haddad has reportedly indicated that the group will continue to fight as he believes the proposal, backed by Israel, is designed to destroy Hamas.

Reports earlier this week suggested that senior Hamas members in Qatar were open to negotiating aspects of the 20-point plan, which includes the group’s disarmament and surrender of any future role in governing Gaza.

However, its military wing holds greater sway over proceedings given that it holds the 48 hostages remaining in Gaza, only 20 of whom are thought to be alive.

One major stumbling block is the requirement for all hostages to be released within 72 hours of the ceasefire, which would rob Hamas of further leverage.

Senior Hamas figures in Gaza also do not believe that Israel will abide by the deal, regardless of US guarantees, after its efforts to assassinate members of its political leadership in Doha last month. 

After the proposal was announced on Monday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated on X that the deal would allow the Israeli military continued access to parts of Gaza, and that his government would “forcibly resist” the creation of a sovereign Palestinian state, defying the US proposal to create a “credible pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood.”

Hamas has maintained that it will refuse any efforts to disarm until a Palestinian state has been established.

Israel has killed at least 66,225 Palestinians in Gaza since October 2023, according to local health authorities.


Kuwaiti and Bahraini academies reaffirm cooperation in diplomatic training

Kuwaiti and Bahraini academies reaffirm cooperation in diplomatic training
Updated 14 min 1 sec ago

Kuwaiti and Bahraini academies reaffirm cooperation in diplomatic training

Kuwaiti and Bahraini academies reaffirm cooperation in diplomatic training
  • Meeting focused on workshops and programs to improve efficiency of ministry of foreign affairs’ employees
  • Latest digital platforms in use in the diplomatic sector also highlighted

LONDON: Kuwait and Bahrain reaffirmed their cooperation in diplomatic training and studies during a visit by a Kuwaiti delegation to the Mohamed bin Mubarak Al-Khalifa Academy for Diplomatic Studies in Manama this week.

Sheikha Muneera Al-Khalifa, the academy’s director general, emphasized the importance of exchanging experiences in diplomatic training and digital transformation of administrative work, the Kuwait News Agency reported.

Her meeting with Nasser Sabeeh Al-Sabeeh, Kuwait’s assistant foreign minister at the Saud Al-Nasser Al-Sabah Kuwait Diplomatic Institute, reaffirmed the ongoing cooperation in diplomatic training with Kuwait.

The meeting also focused on the academy’s training, development strategies, workshops, and programs designed to improve the efficiency of employees at the ministry of foreign affairs. Additionally, it highlighted the latest digital platforms in use in the diplomatic sector, enhancing efficiency and improving the quality of diplomatic work.

Al-Sabeeh said that the Bahraini academy plays a crucial role in developing the competencies of personnel in the foreign ministry through modernized training programs, KUNA reported.


Palestinian Authority reports six killings and hundreds of arrests in Jerusalem over summer

Palestinian Authority reports six killings and hundreds of arrests in Jerusalem over summer
Updated 02 October 2025

Palestinian Authority reports six killings and hundreds of arrests in Jerusalem over summer

Palestinian Authority reports six killings and hundreds of arrests in Jerusalem over summer
  • Quarterly report from Jerusalem governorate details various violations committed by the Israeli government and settlers in the city
  • On Thursday, a total of 356 Israeli settlers entered the Al-Aqsa compound under heavy Israeli police protection to mark the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur

LONDON: Israeli authorities and forces have killed six Palestinians in occupied East Jerusalem and arrested hundreds between July and September, according to a report by the Palestinian Authority-affiliated Jerusalem governorate.

The quarterly report from the governorate details various violations committed by the Israeli government and settlers in the city, including extrajudicial killings, demolition orders, arbitrary arrests, house imprisonment and settlers’ raids on the Al-Aqsa Mosque. During the third quarter of 2025, there were six slain Palestinians, 216 arrests and 116 incidents of home demolitions and land excavations.

On Thursday, a total of 356 Israeli settlers entered the Al-Aqsa compound under heavy Israeli police protection to mark the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur, according to Wafa news agency.

Israeli forces shut down dozens of vital streets and roads in Jerusalem on Wednesday evening to secure the celebrations for Yom Kippur, restricting residents’ movement to a near-total standstill and disrupting the daily lives of Palestinians, the Wafa added.


Istanbul rattled by 5.0-magnitude earthquake

Istanbul rattled by 5.0-magnitude earthquake
Updated 02 October 2025

Istanbul rattled by 5.0-magnitude earthquake

Istanbul rattled by 5.0-magnitude earthquake

ISTANBUL: A 5.0-magnitude earthquake rattled buildings in Turkiye’s largest city Istanbul on Thursday, sending some people rushing out to the streets, Reuters witnesses and the AFAD disaster agency said.
AFAD said the tremor centered in the Marmara Sea, southwest of Istanbul, along a faultline long seen as a risk for the city of 16 million people.


UN demands urgent action to prevent atrocities in Sudan’s El-Fasher

UN demands urgent action to prevent atrocities in Sudan’s El-Fasher
Updated 02 October 2025

UN demands urgent action to prevent atrocities in Sudan’s El-Fasher

UN demands urgent action to prevent atrocities in Sudan’s El-Fasher
  • Call came after reports that long-range drones were being pre-positioned by Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support forces in South Darfur

GENEVA: The United Nations called Thursday for urgent action to prevent “large-scale, ethnically-driven attacks and atrocities” in Sudan’s besieged western city of El-Fasher.
The call from the UN rights office came after reports that long-range drones were being pre-positioned by Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support forces in South Darfur, raising fears of a large attack on the North Darfur city of El-Fasher in coming days.
The RSF is currently waging its fiercest assault yet on El-Fasher, which is the last major city in the vast western region of Darfur still under control of the country’s regular army.
“After over 500 days of unremitting siege by the RSF and incessant fighting, El-Fasher is on the precipice of an even greater catastrophe if urgent measures are not taken loosen the armed vice upon the city and to protect civilians,” UN rights chief Volker Turk said in a statement.
Following persistent reports of serious violence against those fleeing the city, including summary executions and torture, Turk insisted that “atrocities are not inevitable.”
“They can be averted if all actors take concrete action to uphold international law, demand respect for civilian life and property, and prevent the continued commission of atrocity crimes.”
Since April 2023, the war between the RSF and the country’s regular army has killed tens of thousands and created the world’s largest hunger and displacement crisis.
Between September 19 and 29 alone, Turk’s office said at least 91 civilians were killed in RSF artillery shelling, drone strikes and ground incursions.
This “appears to be an effort to force the mass displacement of civilians from El-Fasher,” it warned.
Turk demanded protection for civilians remaining in El-Fasher, including those who may be unable to leave like the elderly and disabled, and called for parties to the conflict to allow in desperately-needed aid.
He described the “unimaginable difficulty” facing civilians there, decrying the continued arbitrary RSF restrictions on bringing food and essential supplies into the city, and citing credible reports of civilians tortured and killed by RSF fighters for doing so.
He also insisted that the “safe and voluntary passage of civilians must be ensured out of El-Fasher, and throughout their movement along key exit routes.”
Turk highlighted the high risk of ethnically-motivated violations and abuses, like those that took place during the earlier RSF offensive on the Zamzam displacement camp south of El-Fasher in April, including the systematic use of sexual violence targeting Zaghawa women and girls.