SouthSudan
Claudia Godid sits on a bed frame and pushes the green headscarf over her face to protect herself from the omnipresent dust. She looks wearily towards the two flagpoles that mark the border between South Sudan and Sudan, a good 100 metres away. She has come to Joda border point from the Sudanese town of Rabak and originally lived in Khartoum. "It was bad, very, very bad," Godid says of the start of Sudan's bloody conflict a year ago. "It was no longer safe – the airstrikes, the shootings. Many women were raped." She wipes away a tear as she recalls horrors and the constant feeling of insecurit...
DPA International
Claudia Godid sits on a bed frame and pushes the green headscarf over her face to protect herself from the omnipresent dust. She looks wearily towards the two flagpoles that mark the border between South Sudan and Sudan, a good 100 metres away. She has come to Joda border point from the Sudanese town of Rabak and originally lived in Khartoum. "It was bad, very, very bad," Godid says of the start of Sudan's bloody conflict a year ago. "It was no longer safe – the airstrikes, the shootings. Many women were raped." She wipes away a tear as she recalls horrors and the constant feeling of insecurit...
DPA
Claudia Godid sits on a bed frame and pushes the green headscarf over her face to protect herself from the omnipresent dust. She looks wearily towards the two flagpoles that mark the border between South Sudan and Sudan, a good 100 metres away. She has come to Joda border point from the Sudanese town of Rabak and originally lived in Khartoum. "It was bad, very, very bad," Godid says of the start of Sudan's bloody conflict a year ago. "It was no longer safe – the airstrikes, the shootings. Many women were raped." She wipes away a tear as she recalls horrors and the constant feeling of insecurit...
DPA International
Claudia Godid sits on a bed frame and pushes the green headscarf over her face to protect herself from the omnipresent dust. She looks wearily towards the two flagpoles that mark the border between South Sudan and Sudan, a good 100 metres away. She has come to Joda border point from the Sudanese town of Rabak and originally lived in Khartoum. "It was bad, very, very bad," Godid says of the start of Sudan's bloody conflict a year ago. "It was no longer safe – the airstrikes, the shootings. Many women were raped." She wipes away a tear as she recalls horrors and the constant feeling of insecurit...
DPA
A ruinous conflict raging for about a year between rival generals in Sudan risks creating the world’s largest hunger crisis, the top UN food official warned on Wednesday. While global attention has been focused on the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza, Cindy McCain, head of the World Food Program, said the fighting in Sudan has shattered the lives of millions across the north-eastern African nation. “The war in Sudan risks triggering the world’s largest hunger crisis,” McCain said as she wrapped up a trip to neighbouring South Sudan, where hundreds of thousands of Sudanese have fled the fighting in the...
Euronews (English)
By The Conversation Christopher Tounsel, University of WashingtonDays of violence in Sudan have resulted in the deaths of at least 180 people, with many more left wounded. The fighting represents the latest crisis in the North African nation, which has contended with numerous coups and periods of civil strife since becoming independent in 1956. The Conversation asked Christopher Tounsel, a Sudan specialist and interim director of the University of Washington’s African Studies Program, to explain the reasons behind the violence and what it means for the chances of democracy being restored in Su...
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