Sudan, Ethiopia and UAE
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UN experts on Monday decried the ongoing attacks on Sudan's hospitals and medical personnel, calling on the international community to take concrete action to protect the country's collapsing health
Three years of war have left Sudan's capital studded with unexploded land mines and other weapons that have killed and maimed residents as they try to rebuild their lives.
KHARTOUM, Sudan — Sudan’s army-appointed prime minister declared victory last week in the long-running civil war against the rebel Rapid Support Forces (RSF), while holding court with foreign journalists in a borrowed conference room of the minerals department.
A doctors also tells The Independent that there is no electricity at the hospital they work at because there is no fuel – and surgeons have performed caesarean sections with almost no medicines
As the conflict in Sudan enters its third year, the nation faces a humanitarian catastrophe: Millions have been displaced, thousands killed, and critical infrastructure left in ruins.
One year since the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) retook the capital, large parts of the ravaged city are a ghost town. The shell of the grand presidential palace is stained black
Both sides also exchanged views on regional and international developments of mutual interest, reaffirming their shared commitment to deepening South-South cooperation
Some Sudanese child soldiers have social media accounts with millions of followers. Psychologists and other experts warn that this is a dangerous trend.