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A cholera outbreak in Sudan has killed 172 people, with more than 2,500 others becoming ill over the past week.
By Khalid Abdelaziz and Eltayeb Siddig KHARTOUM (Reuters) -Destroyed bridges, blackouts, empty water stations and looted ...
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Al Jazeera on MSNSudan’s aid workers fear crackdown under strict new army rulesAid workers and activists are fearful that new regulations announced by Sudan’s army-backed government will lead to a ...
I recalled the day we left our home two years ago, and the week I spent moving from one place to another in Khartoum, dodging ...
Before fighting broke out over two years ago, Khartoum had nearly 100 public and private medical facilities. Today, not a ...
More than 2,300 people have been diagnosed with cholera in Sudan over the past three weeks, authorities said, 90% of them in the capital and surrounding areas where drone attacks have cut off ...
Sudan’s military says it has taken full control of Greater Khartoum. Brig. Gen.
Strategic setback - "The loss of Khartoum was both a strategic and symbolic setback," he told AFP. In response, the RSF needed to broadcast a "message that the war isn't over", according to Sudanese ...
Sudan’s war stems from the breakdown in the transition to ... “We are also ramping up assistance in Khartoum, aiming to support one million people across the coming month.” Distributions are ongoing ...
For nearly two years Port Sudan on the Red Sea was a haven in Sudan’s civil war. The city became the country’s de facto capital after the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) fled to the coast.
The RSF, now reliant on drone attacks after losing nearly all of Khartoum to the Sudanese army in March, is behind these attacks, according to the Sudanese armed forces. These drone strikes represent ...
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