Sudan: Hunger Drives Starving Sudanese to Seek Refuge Abroad

Sudan is in the grips of a humanitarian catastrophe (file photo)

Geneva — Hunger and looming famine are driving a growing number of people to flee war-torn Sudan in search of refuge in neighboring countries, according to World Health Organization officials.

Dr. Shible Sahbani, WHO representative to Sudan, recently told journalists that he met Sudanese refugees on a recent mission to Chad who'd left home only because of hunger.

"They say it is not insecurity, it is not a lack of access to basic services, but because they have nothing to eat," he said at Tuesday's press conference in Geneva.

An acute food insecurity analysis by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, or IPC, in late June indicates that 14 months into the conflict, "Sudan is facing the worst levels of acute food insecurity ever recorded by the IPC in the country," noting that the number of acutely hungry people has risen from 17.7 million to 25.6 million over the last six months.

"There is a risk of famine in 14 areas in greater Darfur, Greater Kordofan, Al Jazirah states and some hotspots in Khartoum if the conflict escalates further, including through increased mobilization of local militias," says the report.

Sahbani has previously described refugees fleeing the Darfur and Kordofan regions as "disturbing, heartbreaking even," explaining that women and children spoke of "loss of life, loss of belongings, hunger, disease, a lack of basic services and violence, including sexual violence." All of this, he said, has led to a massive influx of refugees in the neighboring countries.

Displacement milestone

The United Nations humanitarian affairs agency, OCHA, on Tuesday said the conflict in Sudan "has reached another grim milestone" in its displacement crisis.

Citing the International Organization for Migration, it said 12.7 million people have become displaced since war broke out in mid-April 2023, with more than 10 million remaining inside Sudan and more than 2 million displaced as refugees in five neighboring countries.

Sahbani said that Chad, which is hosting more than 700,000 refugees from Sudan, reportedly is receiving between 500 and 700 new arrivals every day.

"The Chad government and the people of Adre have been welcoming. They have opened their system and their homes," he said. "But this is a system already overstretched, and these are people who have nothing more to share."

The WHO is calling for stepped up cross-regional efforts to provide lifesaving humanitarian aid to millions of people trapped in Sudan's escalating and ever more brutal conflict. Officials are specifically calling for a humanitarian corridor from Chad so essential relief can reach millions of starving people in Sudan.

The U.N.-linked health agency also says the Darfur, Kordofan, Khartoum and Al Jazira states are "all but cut off from humanitarian and health assistance due to the relentless fighting."

It says the situation is particularly alarming in El Fasher, the capital of North Darfur where more than 800,000 people are besieged and cut off from access to food, health care and medical supplies.

"The wounded cannot get the urgent care they need; children and pregnant and breastfeeding women are weak due to acute hunger," WHO representative Sahbani said. "Access is crucially and immediately needed so that we can avert the disastrous health situation."

Weather could make matters worse

He warned that the situation is likely to worsen with the approaching rainy season, which can affect access to health care across the region.

Sahbani said that he expects flooding to hamper the ability of the WHO and its partners to deliver humanitarian assistance, and that the international community will be needed to urgently "bridge the huge funding gap."

OCHA said that 30% of the U.N.'s $2.7 billion Humanitarian Response Plan has been funded, "more than halfway through the year."

"We urgently appeal to donors to make good on their pledges and increase their support," it said.

Sahbani warned that urgent action and a cease-fire are needed to contain an unfolding humanitarian catastrophe.

"If we do not take action now, the rapidly deteriorating situation in Sudan could spiral out of hand, permitting the unchecked reign of diseases, malnutrition and trauma," he said.

Commenting on the U.N.-mediated "proximity talks" with Sudan's warring parties underway in Geneva, the WHO official said, "There were some promising signs."

"Let us wait for the coming hours, days," he said. "If we cannot get a cease-fire, we hope that at least we can get the protection of civilians and the opening of humanitarian corridors."

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