Sudan Conflict Is ‘World’s Fastest-growing Displacement crisis’, UN Official Warns

The crisis displaces over 5.4 million citizens. 
October 5, 2023
Sudan Conflict: RSF Claims Capturing Key Police Base In Khartoum 

As the conflict in Sudan enters its 6th month without an end in sight, the United Nations warned that the conflict has created “the world’s fastest-growing displacement crisis” which has displaced over 5.4 million citizens.

“The past six months have caused untold suffering in Sudan,” Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General, Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Sudan, Ms. Clementine Nkweta-Salami told reporters in Geneva.

Join our WhatsApp Channel

Ms. Nkweta-Salami estimated that the conflict has caused about 30 thousand persons to flee their homes daily and some of the citizens flee with only the clothes they have on them.

Fighting between the Sudanese army, led by Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the Rapid Support Forces led by Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, known as Hemedti, began last April as a result of power struggle between both men.

The conflict between the two commanders has left the country in bad shape with different sectors in the country under immense threat.

Ms. Nkweta-Salami raised the alarm that half of Sudan’s population which is about 24 million could be consume by “conflict, displacement, and disease outbreaks” if protection and humanitarian aids are not provided.

She further explained that “The conflict has already crippled Sudan’s health sector with 70 per cent of all hospitals no longer functional.

“The conflict could reach areas like Jazirah State, Sudan’s breadbasket. This would have grave consequences for food security.

And as the fighting spreads, we are receiving reports of increasing cases of sexual and gender-based violence, enforced disappearance, arbitrary detention, and grave violations of human and children’s rights,” she said.

Ms. Nkweta-Salami also raised the issue of flash floods and cholera outbreak which is ravaging some states in the country.

“I am concerned that this could lead to more outbreaks of water-borne diseases. There is already a cholera outbreak declared in the eastern state of Gedaref.” Noting that “Battling a cholera outbreak in a warzone is difficult at the best of times. With fighting escalating, it may be near-impossible to control.”

Explaining the efforts of United Nation’s aid agencies since the conflict started, Ms. Nkweta-Salami said at least 3 million persons have received support. However, she called on the warring parties in the Sudanese conflict “to respect international law,” noting that “The humanitarian response is a lifeline for millions of people.”

She appealed to the international community to support the humanitarian mission in Sudan saying that the $2.6 billion Dollar appealed for, has not been reached.

She warned that Sudan’s population is “balancing on a knife’s edge.”

Pleading that “much more solidarity” is needed if not the world “may witness Sudan falling off the cliff.”

+ posts

Featured Stories

Latest from Africa

Image of Ghana Coco Board Logo

Cocoa Expansion Impossible Without COCOBOD Debt Write-Off

Ghana’s plan to revive cocoa production and expand farmland next year is facing pushback from one of the country’s biggest labour bodies, which says the programme will fail unless the government writes off more than GH¢30 billion, about US$2.1 billion, in debts
Image of Namibian Flag

Namibia: Worsening Hunger Threatens 612,000 People By 2026

Namibia’s food security situation is expected to deteriorate sharply between October 2025 and March 2026, with about 612,000 people facing high levels of acute food insecurity, according to a new national assessment. The projection means one in five people analysed are likely

Forty-five days that changed elections in Africa?

By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu An unlikely coincidence of ballots in a forty-five day period from the middle of September to the end of October 2025 has cast a new light on the state of democratic governance in Africa and now threatens
Nobel Prize 2023: Norwegian Author, Jon Fosse, Wins 116th Literature Prize
Previous Story

Nobel Prize 2023: Norwegian Author, Jon Fosse, Wins 116th Literature Prize

Oil Assets Divestments Should Not Affect Tax Compliance, NCDMB Warns
Next Story

Oil Assets Divestments Should Not Affect Tax Compliance, NCDMB Warns

Don't Miss

Prince Harry, Meghan Markle Escape Car Chase In New York

Prince Harry, Meghan Markle Escape Near Catastrophic Car Chase In New York

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle found themselves in a harrowing
We Need Quality Education To Tackle  Religious Intolerance - Buhari

We Need Quality Education To Tackle  Religious Intolerance – Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari has said that the citizens need to