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Where Fields Turn to Dust: A Nation’s Struggle with Famine and Fire

Famine-level malnutrition is spreading to more towns in Sudan’s Darfur as conflict continues; a paramilitary attack on a southern hospital killed 22, worsening the humanitarian crisis.

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Osa martin

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Where Fields Turn to Dust: A Nation’s Struggle with Famine and Fire

In the shifting sands of Sudan’s long and weary landscape, where dust and hope once mingled at the horizon, a new and grave shadow has fallen. For years, this vast country has endured the pain of conflict—families pulled from their homes, markets emptied, and children too young for war learning to grow up too fast. Now, in the western expanse of Darfur, hunger has crept closer still, like a distant drumbeat growing louder with each passing day.

On Thursday, a global hunger monitoring group sounded an urgent alarm: more towns in Darfur are teetering on the brink of famine as the country’s civil war grinds on. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, an authority that tracks hunger in crisis zones, reported that acute malnutrition in two additional towns—Umm Baru and Kernoi—has crossed the threshold recognized as famine-level for children. In Umm Baru, more than half of the young children assessed were severely malnourished.

This spread of hunger builds on a dire tapestry already unfolding across Sudan. Earlier reports had confirmed famine in parts of Darfur’s major city el-Fasher and in South Kordofan’s Kadugli. Millions of people have been uprooted, livelihoods shattered, and supplies cut off by a conflict that began in April 2023 between the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a confrontation the United Nations describes as one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world.

The famine warning comes as violence continues elsewhere. On the same day that the hunger alert was issued, paramilitary fighters launched a deadly attack on a military hospital in South Kordofan’s town of Kouik, killing 22 people, including the hospital director and three medical staff members, and wounding several others, according to medical networks tracking the conflict. Hospitals in the region are struggling to operate amid the insecurity, stretching already scant health services to breaking point.

The roots of this unfolding tragedy are deeply intertwined: conflict disrupts farming and markets, drives people from their homes, and hinders humanitarian aid. Once food systems fail and crops go unharvested, families are left with few options—often forced to choose between going hungry or moving again into more insecure terrain. In North Darfur’s hard-hit communities, children’s bodies have become the most stark measure of this devastation, with severe malnutrition now reaching levels rarely seen outside historical famine zones.

International agencies and local groups have repeatedly called for an urgent ceasefire and safe access for aid workers. But without open roads and sustained peace, tens of thousands more could soon slip from the brink of hunger into the abyss of famine. In the shade of these twin crises — hunger and conflict — Sudan’s most vulnerable continue to bear the deepest costs.

AI Image Disclaimer Images in this article are AI-generated illustrations, meant for concept only.

Sources Los Angeles Times, Associated Press, Reuters, The Week (PTI/AP), El País.

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