Two years into one of the world’s deadliest — and most underreported — conflicts, Sudan is being torn apart.
Fighting between the Sudanese army and paramilitary RSF has turned cities into graveyards. Bodies lie unburied. Hospitals are in ruins. Entire towns have been emptied.
About 30% of Sudan’s population have fled their homes.
Aid groups warn the real death toll could be far higher than reported — many areas are inaccessible, and communication blackouts hide the full scale of atrocities.
The brutality is clear, but what we know may only scratch the surface.
Fighting between the Sudanese army and paramilitary RSF has turned cities into graveyards. Bodies lie unburied. Hospitals are in ruins. Entire towns have been emptied.
About 30% of Sudan’s population have fled their homes.
Aid groups warn the real death toll could be far higher than reported — many areas are inaccessible, and communication blackouts hide the full scale of atrocities.
The brutality is clear, but what we know may only scratch the surface.
Two years into one of the world’s deadliest — and most underreported — conflicts, Sudan is being torn apart.
Fighting between the Sudanese army and paramilitary RSF has turned cities into graveyards. Bodies lie unburied. Hospitals are in ruins. Entire towns have been emptied.
About 30% of Sudan’s population have fled their homes.
Aid groups warn the real death toll could be far higher than reported — many areas are inaccessible, and communication blackouts hide the full scale of atrocities.
The brutality is clear, but what we know may only scratch the surface.