The streets of Sudan's El Fasher are running red with blood, and the carnage is so severe that it can be seen from space. The paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have finally taken over the city, following an 18-month siege that left hundreds of thousands of people trapped, forced to live off rainwater and animal feed. The RSF's capture of El Fasher has echoes of the Darfur genocide in the early 2000s, when they perpetrated an ethnically motivated massacre on the same populations being attacked today.
The conflict-driven famine in Sudan is the world's worst humanitarian crisis, with up to 400,000 people dead over two years of war. The scale of the violence has become clear: 12 million people have been displaced, and a quarter of the country's population faces severe hunger. Mass atrocities are rampant, including reports of ethnic targeting, rape, extortion, and mass graves.
The international community is divided on how to respond to the crisis. A core group of countries, called the Quad (the US, UAE, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia), has been trying to negotiate a ceasefire deal for months, but so far with little success. The RSF has agreed to a tentative truce, but it's unclear whether it will stick.
The situation in Sudan is dire, and the world needs to wake up to the crisis. Massive funding gaps have forced aid workers like Mathilde Vu to triage resources, deciding who gets help first. You can support organizations like Vu's team at the Norwegian Refugee Council or other aid groups working on the ground today.
As the death toll mounts and the humanitarian situation worsens, it's clear that something needs to be done. The world has a responsibility to intervene and stop this bloodshed.
The conflict-driven famine in Sudan is the world's worst humanitarian crisis, with up to 400,000 people dead over two years of war. The scale of the violence has become clear: 12 million people have been displaced, and a quarter of the country's population faces severe hunger. Mass atrocities are rampant, including reports of ethnic targeting, rape, extortion, and mass graves.
The international community is divided on how to respond to the crisis. A core group of countries, called the Quad (the US, UAE, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia), has been trying to negotiate a ceasefire deal for months, but so far with little success. The RSF has agreed to a tentative truce, but it's unclear whether it will stick.
The situation in Sudan is dire, and the world needs to wake up to the crisis. Massive funding gaps have forced aid workers like Mathilde Vu to triage resources, deciding who gets help first. You can support organizations like Vu's team at the Norwegian Refugee Council or other aid groups working on the ground today.
As the death toll mounts and the humanitarian situation worsens, it's clear that something needs to be done. The world has a responsibility to intervene and stop this bloodshed.