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Testimonies of harrowing violence from displaced people in Sudan

07 Apr 25 | 09 Apr 25

Testimonies of harrowing violence from displaced people in Sudan

Illustration depicting a man's head in side profile with a gun pointing at his head. Mountains in the background. Caption
Illustration depicting a man's head in side profile with a gun pointing at his head. Mountains in the background.

Since the war between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) started in April 2023 and spread across Sudan, an estimated 11 million people have been forced to flee their homes.

In the southern state of South Kordofan, where the Nuba mountains area is located, hundreds of thousands of displaced people are seeking refuge, according to the Sudanese Relief and Rehabilitation Agency.

Before the war started, the region already experienced waves of displacement during the decades of conflict between the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N) and the Sudanese government.

Many people have been displaced multiple times, increasing their vulnerability. Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders (MSF) currently provides medical care and essential everyday items to displaced people arriving daily.

Testimonies collected from displaced people in five camps where MSF works show the harrowing situation they have lived through and the challenges they continue to face.


“They attacked early morning. We took what we could and fled. We lost two of my children on the way. Up to now I don’t know where they are, there is no phone,” explains a woman in her late 50s who walked five days without food until she and her family were able to reach Al Hadra in South Kordofan. 

An airplane bombed and killed her 15-year-old daughter there.

“It was the first time I saw bombings. I was in the bush collecting woods for shelter. My daughter had gone to the borehole to fetch water for us. I rushed to my tent and later they [the villagers] brought my daughter’s body to me.”

Another woman explains how they managed to survive in Dilling District, South Kordofan: 

“We went to the forest every night to sleep and use the river as protection. We leaned on the riverbank so that the bullets would not hit us. 

“When the shootings stopped, we would rush to the house to get food and water for the children. During an attack I saw a mother who was breastfeeding. 

“They took her boy and threw him away. If you tried to confront them, they could hit you, even shoot the child. For them the boy would grow up and fight back.” 

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Nuba mountains

The area of the Nuba mountains is largely controlled by the SPLM-N. The influx of people arriving in the region that is considered safer than other parts of the country has had an impact on local communities as well. 

The poor harvest in 2023 combined with difficulties in accessing basic services and a lack of humanitarian assistance led to widespread hunger during the lean season both inside and outside the camps where displaced people are living. 

MSF teams working on the ground report many people in need of healthcare, food and water. 

“When the war broke out, we lost everything. When I arrived at the camp, I did not have milk to breastfeed. My child was sick and kept on crying. I gave him herbs and prayed to God”, says a woman in her 20s. 

Illustration of a woman's face in close-up with tears in her eyes Caption
Illustration of a woman's face in close-up with tears in her eyes

A man in his 50s explains that soldiers entered Habila, North Kordofan, to kill all the “black people”: “The moment they entered Habila they captured a big part of my family: 13 people, all men. The militia gathered them in one house and shot them all. I ran away.” 

He fled to Tungul, South Kordofan, where he received some food but where no health service was available, so he fled again.

“From Tungul I went to Korgul displaced camp. Here things are calm. I feel safe. We want to stay here. But we suffered during the rainy season when there is no food – my children got malnourished but none of them died.”

For women fleeing violence, access to healthcare is very challenging. A 30-year-old woman explains:

“I was in the market when they came. I tried to defend myself, but they abused me, and beat my chest. I still feel the pain today. After the torture I tried to get treatment, but I did not have money to do an x-ray”.

Another woman in her 30s explains “I have spent two days without eating anything. I was collecting leaves to cook them. I had to sneak out in the bushes to avoid checkpoints to get medical care in Hajar Jawad.

“During the rainy season, my child and I had malaria, we received treatment in the MSF clinic in Hajar Jawad for malaria and malnutrition”.

Illustration of a young woman huddling behind foliage Caption
Illustration of a young woman huddling behind foliage
Illustration of a woman looking up with her hand raised, with a boot looming above her head Caption
Illustration of a woman looking up with her hand raised, with a boot looming above her head

What MSF is doing

MSF runs activities in Dalami locality and Western Jebel. In Dalami locality, our teams support Tujur Hospital with emergency room and maternity services, and malnutrition and male and female in-patient wards. 

In the hospital in January 2025, MSF conducted 20,185 outpatient consultations and 459 admissions, 30 percent of which for malaria. The teams have assisted 119 births and carried out 215 sexual and reproductive health consultations. In Um Heitan, another location where we work, MSF has carried out 6,493 outpatient consultations.

MSF has also been supporting health centres, conducting mobile clinics in camps for internally displaced people, and distributing essential items in Western Jabel, but the unstable security situation has made the delivery of medical services challenging. 

Our teams in the Nuba mountains observe an extremely inconsistent and insufficient coverage of primary and secondary healthcare. Where care is available, it is often inaccessible due to distance and insecurity.

There is also an almost complete lack of protection services which is particularly concerning given the levels of violence experienced or witnessed by the population, the separation of families, and the lack of shelter for many.

MSF and the crisis in Sudan

The violence between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has trapped millions of people in the middle of an unexpected conflict. Hundreds of thousands have been forced to flee their homes while access to essential services such as healthcare has become increasingly difficult.

Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders (MSF) teams already working in Sudan have been responding to the crisis since its first moments.