No To Second Anniversary Of Sudan War

20 Days(s) Ago    👁 66
What you need to know:
  • Sudans crisis is met with a deafening silence and outstanding indifference.
  • Sudan is suffering from a lack of political will to end the fighting.
  • April 15 marked one year since the breakout of the devastating war in Sudan that has killed 14,000 people, displaced over 16.5 million and led to the worst humanitarian crisis today with half of the population in need of humanitarian assistance.

    Almost five million people are on the brink of famine, 18 million face acute food insecurity and the economy has contracted by 40 per cent since the war began.

    The magnitude of this crisis is being felt in the broader eastern, northern and Horn of Africa regions with 1.75 million people having fled mostly into South Sudan, Chad and Egypt. The scale of the suffering of the Sudanese is unimaginable and the crisis affects the most vulnerable. Some 53 per cent of the internally displaced are women and girls, 19 million children are thought to be out of school while 70 per cent of health facilities in conflict-affected areas are not functioning.

    The President and I cultism Guyo: Patients blood on States hands

    Apart from the wanton destruction of infrastructure and looting, whole households have had their lifetime savings, assets, and basis of livelihoods wiped out by this senseless war. This war is producing poverty on an industrial scale.

    What began as clashes between military and paramilitary forces in Khartoum last year became a fully-fledged war engulfing the country, drawing in other armed groups. The belligerents have also been accused of looting, sexual violence and the use of starvation as a weapon of war.

    Humanitarian crisis

    However, despite its being one of the worst, Sudan's humanitarian crisis has received very little attention compared to other crises of even smaller magnitude. The human carnage alone should have elicited African and international outrage as well as swift action. Yet Sudans crisis is met with a deafening silence and outstanding indifference.

    This is also reflected in the grossly under-resourced humanitarian response. The UN reports that only six per cent of the estimated $2.7 billion needed for the countrys Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan has been received. There is also very little media coverage of the scale of the war and the dire humanitarian situation. Which begs the question: Do Sudanese lives matter at all? Or rather, as much as others? How can a conflict of this magnitude elicit such underwhelming attention, except such inattention be deliberate or reckless abandonment?

    Sudan was mired in a multilayered crisis of governance, development and security way before the war. However, the exacerbated situation since then has, sadly, been obscured by conflicts and humanitarian crises elsewhereincluding the equally dire situations in Gaza and Ukraine, where the world has put most of its focus.

    The securocracy in Sudan has placed severe restrictions on the media environment with local journalists facing threats to their lives while their international colleagues are denied entry or have stopped covering the country. Besides, the shutdown of the telecommunications systems has created an information blackout with far-reaching ramification. Aid organisations report that a two-month internet blackout blamed on warring parties is preventing people from communicating and also making or receiving payments, severely impacting markets and food providers.

    Actively silenced

    Sudans crisis is not only being ignored; it is being actively silenced. Fundamentally, Sudan is suffering from a lack of political will to end the fighting. Finding a sustainable resolution of the conflict and addressing the dire humanitarian crisis should be a top priority of all parties in Sudan, the African Union (AU), the Inter-Governmental Agency on Development (IGAD) and the international community.

    The AU and IGAD, in particular, must find a sustainable political solution to end the war. This must be immediate and decisive before the magnitude of the crisis spreads further across the broader eastern, northern, and Horn of Africa regions and its long-term impact on the Sudanese people deepens beyond what national resources and development aid can address. The international community must turn their attention on Sudan by committing to support the gravely under-resourced emergency response and call for unimpeded humanitarian access for food distribution to be secured.

    But there is hope even amid grave adversity, demonstrated in small but resilient acts of solidarity and support by Sudan-based civil society groups providing medical, food and water, sanitation and adequate hygiene (WASH) aid despite grave threats from belligerents.

    The Can Do and Never Allow Tyranny have inspired Sudanese everywhere to make extreme sacrifices to serve the under-served of their compa