Toddler evacuated from Gaza with rare disease recovers from malnutrition in Italian hospital
Toddler evacuated from Gaza with rare disease recovers from malnutrition in Italian hospital/node/2614319/middle-east
Toddler evacuated from Gaza with rare disease recovers from malnutrition in Italian hospital
More than half a million people in Gaza, a quarter of the population, are experiencing catastrophic levels of hunger because of the blockade and ongoing military operations. (AP)
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Updated 06 September 2025
AP
Toddler evacuated from Gaza with rare disease recovers from malnutrition in Italian hospital
Little Shamm Qudeih was emaciated when she arrived last month
Updated 06 September 2025
AP
NAPLES: Since arriving emaciated in Italy from Gaza, little Shamm Qudeih has celebrated her second birthday and gained weight on a new diet that includes a special porridge — progress welcomed by doctors treating her for severe malnutrition worsened by a genetic metabolic disease.
Just weeks ago, the toddler was all skin and bones as she clung to her mother in a hospital in southern Gaza, after months of being unable to get the food and treatment she needed because of an Israeli blockade aimed at pressuring the Hamas militant group to release hostages. Then she was evacuated to Italy for medical treatment, along with six other Palestinian children.
A striking photo of Shamm wincing in her mother’s arms, with her hair matted and ribs protruding from her chest, was taken by Associated Press freelance journalist Mariam Dagga just days before the child left Gaza on Aug. 13. It was one of Dagga’s last images. She was among 22 people killed in an Aug. 25 Israeli strike on the same hospital in southern Gaza.
More than half a million people in Gaza, a quarter of the population, are experiencing catastrophic levels of hunger because of the blockade and ongoing military operations, the world’s leading authority on hunger crises said last month. Gaza City, in the north, is experiencing famine, it said.
Toddler perks up
By this week, Shamm was sitting up, alert in a hospital crib in Naples, her fine blonde hair pulled into a high ponytail. She wore a T-shirt emblazoned with the word “cute.” Her wide eyes gleamed as her older sister and mother called her name from across the room, and she broke into a smile.
Weighing around 4 kilograms (9 pounds) when she arrived in Italy, Shamm was “in a serious and challenging clinical state,” said Dr. Daniele de Brasi, a pediatric genetic disease specialist who is treating her at Santobono Pausilipon Children’s Hospital in Naples.
She now weighs 5.5 kilograms (just over 12 pounds), which is still no more than half of the median weight for a child of her age, de Brasi said.
The doctor said “a big part” of her undernourishment was due to a genetic metabolic disease called glycogen storage disease, which interferes with the absorption of nutrients, particularly carbohydrates, and can cause muscle weakness and impede growth. The condition is primarily managed through a high-carbohydrate diet.
So far, “We are very satisfied with her progress,’’ de Brasi said.
A mother’s struggle.
Israel military offensive on Gaza has killed more than 64,000 Palestinians in nearly two years of fighting. The Gaza Health Ministry, which is part of the Hamas-run government and run by medical professionals, does not say how many were civilians or combatants but that around half of those killed were women and children.
The family was forced to move more than a dozen times, and Shamm’s mother, Islam, struggled to get her proper medical care, visiting many hospitals and clinics. Doctors suspected the rare condition but could not test for it, much less treat it properly. They sometimes offered antibiotics.
“It became worse as a result of the lack of food, treatment and possibilities,” Islam said in an interview with Shamm resting on her shoulder. “We have been displaced maybe about 15 times, from tent to tent. We walked long distances and, along the way, it was hot, and the sun was hitting us.”
For a while, doctors administered a special formula, but Shamm would not take it, having lost the habit of drinking milk after supplies in Gaza became scarce.
The UN warned last month that starvation and malnutrition in Gaza are at the highest levels since the war began. Nearly 12,000 children under 5 were found to have acute malnutrition in July — including more than 2,500 with severe malnutrition, the most dangerous level. The World Health Organization says the numbers are likely an undercount.
A final photograph in Gaza
It was at Nasser Hospital in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis that Dagga photographed Shamm for the last time on Aug. 9. During the visit, Shamm cried in pain in her hospital bed. Her arms, legs and ribs were skeletal, her belly swollen.
Islam had gone to school with Dagga, who visited the hospital, and remembered her fondly.
“She was always coming to the hospital to check on me and Shamm,” right up to the day of their departure for Italy, Islam said. “She stayed until the last step of the stairs to say goodbye to me.”
After arriving in Italy, Islam learned that Dagga had died in an attack that killed four other journalists.
“I was upset when I heard and knew that she had died,” Islam said.
Ongoing treatment
Shamm is among 181 Palestinian children being treated in Italy, according to the Italian Foreign Ministry. About one-third of those have arrived since March, when Israel ended a ceasefire with Hamas and imposed the 2 1/2 month blockade on all imports, including food and medicine.
Israel denies there is starvation in Gaza, despite accounts to the contrary from witnesses, UN agencies and experts. It says it allowed enough aid to enter before and after the tightened blockade and has allowed increased supplies in recent weeks.
In Naples, Shamm now has a feeding tube in her nose to ensure she gets the right mix of nutrients overnight. Doctors aim to remove the tube in about a month. During the day, she is free to eat solid food, including meat and fish. A cornerstone of her diet is the carbohydrate-rich porridge.
Her current intake is around 500 calories a day, which doctors are gradually increasing.
“In these cases, growing too fast can cause problems,” de Brasi said.
Her 10-year-old sister, Judi, was brought to Italy as an accompanying family member, and doctors began treating her after noting that she was at least three or four kilograms underweight, de Brasi said. She has gained two kilograms (nearly 5 pounds) and is in good condition.
With both daughters improving, Shamm’s mother is allowing herself to experience relief. But it is too soon to think about going back to Gaza, where Shamm’s father is.
“Now there is no way to go back, as long as the war is going on. There are no possibilities for my daughters,’’ she said.
US envoy calls Lebanon a ‘failed state’ as Syria expected to join anti-IS coalition
Barrack pointedly said Lebanon was the only state in the region “not jumping in line” with the new Middle East realignments
Updated 01 November 2025
AP
BEIRUT: The US’s special envoy for Syria on Saturday called Lebanon “a failed state” in remarks underscoring Washington’s frustration with Beirut’s “paralyzed government,” even as Syria inches toward closer ties with the US
Speaking at the Manama Dialogue summit in Bahrain during a panel on “US Policy in the Levant,” Thomas Barrack hailed developments in Syria following the downfall of Bashar Assad in December. He confirmed that Syrian President Ahmad Al-Sharaa is expected to visit Washington on Nov. 10 — the first such visit by a Syrian president since the country’s independence in 1946.
Barrack also said that Syria is expected to join the US-led anti–Daesh group coalition, describing it as “a big step” and “remarkable.” The coalition includes some 80 countries working to prevent a resurgence of IS.
As for Lebanon, Barrack pointedly said it was the only state in the region “not jumping in line” with the new Middle East realignments. “The state is Hezbollah,” he said, noting that the Iran-backed group provides for its supporters and fighters in ways the Lebanese state cannot — in a country where basic services like electricity and water are chronically unreliable.
“It is really up to the Lebanese. America is not going to get deeper involved in the situation with a foreign terrorist organization and a failed state dictating the pace and asking for more resources and more money and more help,” he said.
Barrack added that the US would not intervene in regional disputes but would support its ally “if Israel becomes more aggressive toward Lebanon.”
Israel recently intensified its strikes on southern Lebanon. Both sides have accused each other of violating a ceasefire, which nominally ended the latest Israel-Hezbollah war last November. The conflict started after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel that triggered the war in Gaza.
Hezbollah began firing rockets into northern Israel in support of Hamas and the Palestinians, prompting Israeli airstrikes and artillery shelling in return. The low-level exchanges escalated into full-scale war in September 2024.
Since the ceasefire, Israel has continued to carry out near-daily strikes across southern Lebanon, saying they target Hezbollah militants, weapons depots and command centers. Israeli forces have also maintained positions on several strategic points inside Lebanese territory.
Lebanese officials have accused Israel of striking civilian areas and destroying infrastructure unrelated to Hezbollah, calling on Israeli forces to withdraw and respect Lebanon’s sovereignty.
Barrack said that Israel is still bombing southern Lebanon because “thousands of rockets and missiles” remain there, threatening it. But he acknowledged that “it is not reasonable for us to tell Lebanon to forcibly disarm one of its political parties — everybody is scared to death to go into a civil war.”
“The path is very clear — that it needs to be to Jerusalem or Tel Aviv for a conversation along with Syria. Syria is showing the way,” Barrack said, adding that Syria and Israel are expected to hold a fifth set of de-escalation discussions.
The United States is leading a diplomatic push involving Syria and Israel, who are engaged in direct negotiations to de-escalate tensions and restore a 1974 ceasefire agreement. That deal established a demilitarized separation zone between Israeli and Syrian forces and stationed a UN peacekeeping force to maintain calm.
Tensions have soared between the two neighbors following the overthrow of Assad in December in a lightning rebel offensive led by Islamist insurgents.
Shortly after Assad’s overthrow, Israeli forces seized control of the UN-patrolled buffer zone in Syria set up under the 1974 agreement and carried out airstrikes on military sites in what officials said was aimed at creating a demilitarized zone south of Damascus.
Israel has said it will not allow hostile forces to establish themselves along the frontier, as Iranian-backed groups did during Assad’s rule. It distrusts Syria’s new government, which is led by former Islamist insurgents.
How the bloody siege of Sudan’s El-Fasher triggered a humanitarian disaster
Civilians face an impossible choice — stay under fire or flee into a desert — as power changes hands
Aid workers warn that without urgent help, entire communities in war-torn Sudanese areas may perish
Updated 26 sec ago
ANAN TELLO
LONDON: In Sudan’s North Darfur region, by all accounts, a humanitarian catastrophe is unfolding as hospitals overflow, food supplies dwindle and families flee violence that has engulfed El-Fasher.
Since the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces stormed the city in late October, aid workers have been overwhelmed as civilians arrive on foot in nearby towns while many others remain missing.
“Right now, many people are arriving to locations like Tawila, Al-Malha, Melit and Kosti with no possessions and in desperate need of humanitarian support,” Kashif Shafique, country director at Relief International Sudan, told Arab News by email.
“Terrifyingly, hundreds of thousands are still missing and unaccounted for. It will take some families weeks to reach safe havens; a lot of people who were already severely malnourished are in open deserts without enough to eat or drink.”
At least 1,500 people were killed in just two days as residents tried to flee, said Tasneem Al-Amin, a spokesperson for the Sudan Doctors Network. (Reuters)
Sudan plunged into conflict in April 2023 after a violent struggle for power broke out between the RSF and the Sudanese Armed Forces.
More than 150,000 people were killed across the country, and about 12 million have fled their homes in what the UN has called the world's largest humanitarian crisis.
For many, not knowing the fate of loved ones since Oct. 26, when the RSF seized El-Fasher, has been agonizing, according to Sudan-based journalist Yosra Sabir.
“Everyone I speak to fears that their families are dead,” she wrote in a LinkedIn post on Oct. 30. “They are desperately reaching out to contacts in Tawila to see if anyone has made it there, or scanning through hundreds of graphic videos, trying to recognize their relatives among the victims being humiliated and killed on camera.”
In Tawila, about 60 km from El-Fasher, people have been trickling in — exhausted, starved, traumatized and injured — many missing family members.
“Among all the people arriving in Tawila, we are seeing very few adult men,” Javid Abdelmoneim, president of Medecins Sans Frontieres, said in a statement on Oct. 28.
“Given the history of ethnically targeted violence in El-Fasher, we are deeply concerned about the risk of a potential bloodbath.”
He also highlighted that his teams have been observing “extremely alarming levels of malnutrition among women and children … indicative of a famine-like situation.
Sabir noted that “the testimonies of survivors from the genocide in El-Fasher are beyond horrific.”
The UN Human Rights office warned on Oct. 31 that atrocities in El-Fasher and in Bara, North Kordofan, could amount to “numerous crimes under international law.” (AFP)
“Starved and skeletal, they describe witnessing their loved ones executed before their eyes, being beaten, raped, injured, and then forced to flee for their lives — running past countless bodies that lined the road.”
According to the International Organization for Migration, 33,485 people were displaced from El-Fasher in just three days, from Oct. 26 to 28. Since April, more than half a million have arrived in Tawila from El-Fasher and nearby towns, the Norwegian Refugee Council said.
But the road to Tawila is perilous.
One man who escaped described the suffering during the four-day journey on foot. “We were divided into groups and beaten,” he told the BBC on Oct. 30. “We saw people murdered in front of us. We saw people being beaten.
“I myself was hit on the head, back and legs. They beat me with sticks. They wanted to execute us completely. But when the opportunity arose, we ran, while others in front were detained.”
Sabir noted that even by car, the journey is far from easy. “Fleeing to Tawila may sound like a short escape, but it is not,” she wrote. “The dirt road from El-Fasher to Tawila takes around three hours by car. Though it’s only about 70 km on the map, the road winds and twists, making it even longer.
“People who have been starving under siege for months are now walking this entire distance on foot.”
The walk takes three to four days, according to the UN Human Rights office.
Sudan plunged into conflict in April 2023 after a violent struggle for power broke out between the RSF and the Sudanese Armed Forces. (Reuters)
“There’s no safe passage out,” said Shahd Hammou, senior country program manager at the Center for Civilians in Conflict. “There is no access to aid, humanitarian aid is blocked, and staff continue to come under attack.”
Hammou stressed the “urgent need” to guarantee safe routes for fleeing civilians, end attacks on infrastructure and aid workers, and allow unrestricted humanitarian access.
“Without these immediate actions,” she told Arab News from Port Sudan, “civilian protection and humanitarian response will collapse — or rather continue to collapse, leaving millions and millions of people beyond the reach of both safety and support.”
Port Sudan is currently under the SAF’s military control, serving as the de facto seat of its government. SAF consolidated control over Port Sudan and central and eastern Sudan after retaking Khartoum from the RSF in March 2025.
Despite the loss of the capital, the RSF currently holds sway across the vast Darfur region in western Sudan.
In Tawila, the situation is “heartbreaking,” a Relief International staff member, whose name is being withheld for safety reasons, told Arab News.
“Most of the cases we are seeing are related to trauma injuries and malnutrition, as well as complications following long journeys without clean water, medical care or shelter,” the aid worker said.
INNUMBERS
• 36,000+ People who have fled El-Fasher to Tawila since Oct. 25.
• 652,000+ Displaced Sudanese who were already sheltering there.
“One case that stayed with me was a young boy who arrived severely dehydrated and weak, but he slowly recovered after receiving emergency support.”
Relief International runs more than 130 health facilities across Sudan, but humanitarian access to El-Fasher has been severely restricted since April 2024 due to the ongoing siege.
After tightening that siege for 18 months, reportedly depriving residents of food, water and medical supplies, the RSF seized the last major SAF stronghold in Darfur.
As in previous assaults on the city, civilians bore the brunt amid already dire conditions.
UN agencies warn that roughly 250,000 civilians remain trapped in the city, including an estimated 130,000 children facing severe shortages of food, clean water and medicine.
At least 1,500 people were killed in just two days as residents tried to flee, said Tasneem Al-Amin, a spokesperson for the Sudan Doctors Network.
In a post shared by the medical group on X, Al-Amin described the situation as “a true genocide based on ethnicity.”
UN agencies warn that roughly 250,000 civilians remain trapped in the city, including an estimated 130,000 children facing severe shortages of food, clean water and medicine. (AP)
Echoing those words, Mona Nour Al-Daem, the SAF government’s deputy commissioner of humanitarian aid, denounced the assault as “genocide against unarmed civilians.”
Speaking in Port Sudan, she said RSF forces had “executed patients and the wounded in hospitals” and hunted civilians fleeing the city, with many victims subjected to sexual violence.
Satellite imagery analyzed by the Yale University Humanitarian Research Lab shows pools of blood and human bodies in El-Fasher after the RSF takeover, corroborating reports of mass killings.
In a paper published Oct. 27, researchers noted that “El-Fasher appears to be in a systematic and intentional process of ethnic cleansing of Fur, Zaghawa and Berti indigenous non-Arab communities through forced displacement and summary execution.”
Videos circulating on social media, reportedly filmed by RSF fighters, show armed men terrorizing unarmed civilians, including women holding small children.
“We’ve seen really horrifying footage being circulated on social media and the news, with witness accounts pointing to house-to-house killings and entire families being executed,” said Hammou.
“It’s one of the darkest chapters of the Darfuri conflict in decades — El-Fasher has become a slaughterhouse.”
The UN Human Rights office warned on Oct. 31 that atrocities in El-Fasher and in Bara, North Kordofan, could amount to “numerous crimes under international law.”
It said that in El-Fasher, communications were cut and the situation “chaotic on the ground,” with reports of sexual violence and attacks on shelters for displaced families.
It quoted witnesses as saying that at least 25 women were gang-raped at gunpoint when RSF forces entered a shelter for displaced people near El-Fasher University, “forcing the remaining displaced persons — around 100 families— to leave the location amid shooting and intimidation of older residents.”
On Oct. 29, RSF leader Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo acknowledged “violations” in El-Fasher and promised an investigation. A day later, a senior UN official said RSF representatives claimed to have arrested suspects.
Hammou warned that “the fall of El-Fasher marks a dangerous new phase in Sudan’s war, with the violence spreading toward Kordofan, an area that had previously sheltered thousands of displaced people from Darfur.
“Further instability there would really trigger new waves of displacement, leave entire communities exposed to renewed violence, and shrink the possibilities and likelihoods of the protection of civilians and access to humanitarian aid and safety,” she said.
On Oct. 30, the Sudan Doctors Network accused the RSF of “summarily executing” 38 civilians in the village of Umm Dam Hajj Ahmed in North Kordofan state “on charges of army affiliation.”
The medical group also wrote on X that more than 4,500 people have been displaced from Baba, with 1,900 of them reaching El-Obeid city by Oct. 31.
As the violence intensifies, humanitarian workers, who are often the first and sometimes the only responders in crisis zones, have also become targets.
Medical facilities have been ransacked and staff killed. On Oct. 28, RSF militants reportedly attacked El-Fasher’s main medical center, the Saudi Hospital, and “cold-bloodedly” killed 460 people, said the Sudan Doctors Network.
The next day, five Sudanese Red Crescent Society volunteers were killed in Bara, in North Kordofan state, the organization said in a statement.
Amid the mayhem, aid teams are struggling to meet the rising needs.
Aid workers have been overwhelmed as civilians arrive on foot in nearby towns while many others remain missing. (AFP)
Relief International’s Shafique said aid teams “are doing everything we can to provide life-saving health care, however the locations receiving an influx of displaced people were already severely overwhelmed with nowhere near enough resources.”
Dr. Zahra, who is part of Relief International’s mobile team in Tawila, said the near-collapse of Sudan’s health system has left “the few remaining facilities overwhelmed.
“Even prior to the latest surge of displacement from El-Fasher, the number of health consultations our teams were delivering often surpassed 80 — and at times 100 — patients per day, stretching both staff and resources,” she told Arab News by email through the NGO’s media department.
“People here are starving and dying from preventable diseases,” she said. “Every day, children who arrive at our clinics could survive, if only the right treatment and nutrition was available.”
Likewise, MSF’s Abdelmoneim said Tawila Hospital is “overwhelmed” and its surgical team “working at full capacity.”
Humanitarian groups are calling for an urgent surge in aid and safe, unimpeded access to affected communities.
Hammou, of the Center for Civilians in Conflict, gave warning that “humanitarian access is dwindling further, particularly in Darfur. It’s been brought to a standstill by the violence and then further consolidated by the fall of El-Fasher to the RSF.”
She added: “This brings entire populations further cut off from food, from water and medical relief.”
Separately, the Tawila-based Relief International staffer said: “Our most urgent needs are medical supplies, adequate shelter, clean water and food, as well as more support for our frontline health workers.
“We hope the world will not forget Sudan.”
Videos circulating on social media, reportedly filmed by RSF fighters, show armed men terrorizing unarmed civilians, including women holding small children. (AFP)
Before the war erupted in April 2023, 15.8 million people in Sudan needed humanitarian assistance, according to UN figures. Now, that number has doubled to 30.4 million — more than half the population.
The World Food Program says 24.6 million people are acutely food insecure, while 637,000 face catastrophic hunger.
According to Relief International Sudan’s Shafique, the situation “is only getting worse” as conflict, famine and disease claim more lives daily.
For her part, Hammou said: “Repeated displacement is taking a devastating toll on families, who have been forced to flee time and again, constantly searching for new places of refuge.
“Towns that once offered safety are now overwhelmed, leaving people with nowhere stable to go — no food and no shelter.”
Yet even those who manage to flee are the fortunate few. Most remain trapped in horrific conditions, cut off from aid and the outside world.
“We’ve seen only a small minority flee from El-Fasher toward Tawila, Melit and other North Darfur localities along the border with Chad, while the vast majority remain trapped in and around the city, cut off and besieged by the paramilitaries,” Hammou said.
“With both Darfur and Kordofan destabilizing, civilians face an impossible choice; stay under fire or flee into the unknown.”
Twelve million have fled their homes in what the UN has called the world's largest humanitarian crisis. (AFP)
The RSF has denied involvement in what it calls “tribal conflicts,” and in the Oct. 29 video statement, Dagalo said any “soldier or any officer who committed a crime or crossed the lines against any person … will be immediately arrested and the result (of the investigation) to be announced immediately and in public in front of everyone.”
According to a BBC News report, “it is not clear how much control the RSF leadership has over its foot soldiers, a loose mix of hired militias, allied Arab groups and regional mercenaries, many from Chad and South Sudan.”
Displaced Gazans find shelter in Yasser Arafat’s dilapidated villa
Located in the Rimal neighborhood in Gaza City, the house was heavily damaged by Israeli strikes during the two years of war
Ashraf Nafeth Abu Salem found shelter in the residence with his own and other families
Updated 01 November 2025
AFP
GAZA CITY: The Gazan residence of the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat stands in ruins, like most other buildings in the devastated territory, but the remains of the once-lavish villa now also host several displaced families.
AFPTV footage shows the house, converted into a museum after the Palestinian leader’s death in 2004 and bearing murals in his honor, surrounded by rubble.
Located in the Rimal neighborhood in Gaza City, the house was heavily damaged by Israeli strikes during the two years of war that followed Hamas’s unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.
Ashraf Nafeth Abu Salem, a university professor who found shelter in the residence with his own and other families, said he had decided to clean up the rubble inside the house’s courtyard, which was “largely destroyed and burned.”
A metal door that opens from the villa onto the street is adorned with a poster of Arafat, wearing his trademark keffiyeh and sunglasses. Behind him in the image is a smaller picture of the current president of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmud Abbas.
Abu Salem leafed through an old, yellowed book bearing Arafat’s portrait.
“We belong to the generation of the first intifada (in 1987). We grew up throwing stones,” he said.
“For us, President Abu Ammar was a model and a symbol of the Palestinian national struggle,” the professor said, referring to Arafat by the affectionate name used by supporters.
Three-quarters of the buildings in the Gaza Strip have been destroyed in the two-year war, producing over 61 million tons of debris, according to UN data analyzed by AFP.
Syrian president Sharaa expected to visit Washington, US envoy says
During the visit, Syria would “hopefully” join the US-led coalition to defeat Daesh, Barrack said
It would mark Sharaa’s second visit to the United States
Updated 01 November 2025
Reuters
MANAMA: United States Special Envoy to Syria Tom Barrack said on Saturday that Syrian President Ahmed Sharaa was expected to visit Washington.
During the visit, Syria would “hopefully” join the US-led coalition to defeat Islamic State, Barrack told reporters on the sidelines of the Manama Dialogue in Bahrain, an annual global security and geopolitical conference.
It would mark Sharaa’s second visit to the United States, following his address to the UN General Assembly in New York in September.
Since seizing power from Bashar Assad last December, Sharaa has made a series of foreign trips as his transitional government seeks to re-establish Syria’s ties with world powers that had shunned Damascus during Assad’s rule.
Syria is not a member of a US-led coalition formed in 2014 to defeat the Islamic State militant group.
At its peak between 2014 and 2017, the Islamic State held sway over roughly a third of Syria and Iraq, where it imposed its extreme interpretation of Islamic sharia law and gained a reputation for shocking brutality.
The US-led coalition and its local partners drove the extremists from their last stronghold in 2019. The group has been attempting to exploit the fall of the Assad regime to stage a comeback in Syria and neighboring Iraq, sources told Reuters in June.
‘Large numbers’ in Sudan’s El-Fasher facing death: MSF
MSF denounced the “horrendous mass atrocities and killings, both indiscriminate and ethnically-targeted,” that have occurred in and around El-Fasher this week
Survivors reported that people were separated based on their gender, age or presumed ethnic identity
Updated 01 November 2025
AFP
GENEVA: Doctors Without Borders on Saturday said it feared an ongoing potentially fatal situation for “large numbers of people” in Sudan’s El-Fasher, which has been captured by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.
Thousands of people have fled from El-Fasher, which fell to the RSF on October 26 after an 18-month siege.
Since then, testimonies of bloody violence targeting civilians have proliferated.
In a statement, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) denounced the “horrendous mass atrocities and killings, both indiscriminate and ethnically-targeted,” that have occurred in and around El-Fasher this week.
We denounce the horrendous mass atrocities and killings, both indiscriminate and ethnically-targeted, that have culminated this week in and around El Fasher, Sudan.
— MSF International (@MSF)
“Large numbers of people remain in grave danger and are being prevented by the Rapid Support Forces and its allies from reaching safer areas, such as Tawila where we work,” the NGO added.
But the numbers of people arriving to Tawila, a nearby region, “don’t add up, while accounts of large-scale atrocities are mounting,” according to MSF’s head of emergencies Michel Olivier Lacharite.
“Where are all the missing people who have already survived months of famine and violence in El-Fasher?” he said.
“The most likely, albeit frightening, answer is that they are being killed, blocked, and hunted down when trying to flee.”
Humanitarian organizations fear ethnically motivated atrocities similar to those committed in the early 2000s in Darfur by the Arab Janjaweed militias, from which the RSF originated.
Several eyewitnesses told MSF that a group of 500 civilians, along with soldiers from the Sudanese Armed Forces and the army-allied Joint Forces, had attempted to flee on October 26, but most were killed or captured by the RSF and their allies.
Survivors reported that people were separated based on their gender, age or presumed ethnic identity, and that many are still being held for ransom. One survivor described “horrific scenes” where fighters crushed prisoners with their vehicles.
The war in Sudan has killed thousands of people, displaced millions more and triggered the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, according to the United Nations.
The conflict erupted in April 2023 with a power struggle between two former allies: General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhane, army chief and Sudan’s de facto leader since the 2021 coup, and RSF chief General Mohamed Dagalo.