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'They're dying daily': Inside Sudan's besieged city of al-Fashir as famine takes hold

'They're dying daily': Inside Sudan's besieged city of al-Fashir as famine takes hold

SBS Australia4 days ago
In the Sudanese city of al-Fashir, women sing prayers, begging for food. The city has been cut off from the world by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) for more than 15 months. No food or aid delivery has been allowed in. Now, civilians worry the only thing that awaits them is death. "If you don't rescue us, I swear by God, no treatment or hospitals are available, only death," a woman trapped in the besieged city told SBS News.
"We have nothing left for us but death."
'They're dying daily' Hundreds of thousands of people are under siege in al-Fashir, the Sudanese army's last holdout in the western Darfur region. People are running out of food and coming under constant artillery and drone barrages, while those who flee violent attacks and a cholera outbreak in surrounding areas. The city is the biggest remaining frontline in the region between Sudan's army and the RSF, under fire at a pivotal point in a civil war now well into its third year.
But the RSF has blocked food supplies and sources speaking to Reuters have said aid convoys trying to reach the city have been attacked. Prices for the goods that traders are able to smuggle in cost more than five times the national average.
LISTEN TO Now, residents are facing famine. Mohamed Dodah, a refugee and Zaghawa community leader, fled to the besieged city as it was the last city in Darfur not under RSF control. Dodah said people eat one meal a day — if that — and said he's surrounded by starvation and death. "If you could eat breakfast, you'll wait for the next day to eat another meal," Dodah told SBS News. "They're suffering right now. They're dying daily."
What food civilians can get is poor. Some eat hay. Ambaz — peanut oil waste, which is typically used to feed animals — is reportedly now the primary source of food. But there are fears that even that is running out.
Ambaz — or peanut oil waste — is typically used to feed pets in Sudan. But now, it's civilians' primary source of food amid famine. Source: Supplied / Mohamed Dodah Farhan Haq, deputy spokesperson for the United Nations' secretary-general, said civilians in al-Fashir are at a breaking point. "Local sources say people are dying from hunger and malnutrition," Haq told SBS News. "Community-run kitchens have shut down due to a lack of food stocks, and some residents have reportedly resorted to consuming animal feed." The UN says half of Sudan's 50 million population is facing acute hunger after more than two years of civil war between RSF militants and the Sudanese army. In Darfur, the UN has declared famine in 11 locations.
UNICEF estimates more than 330,000 people are facing malnutrition in the city of al-Fashir alone due to a total blockade of aid by RSF militants.
LISTEN TO It's becoming an increasingly impossible situation for civilians, who also struggle with shellings and increasingly more dangerous weather conditions. "One and a half million civilians are suffering from the ravages of artillery and drone shelling, as well as shrapnel from the fighting on the outskirts of the city," Dodah said. One civilian said the citizens are "suffering extremely harshly", especially in harsh weather conditions. Temperatures are hitting 35 degrees, while rain and storms bombard the city.
"These houses do not provide shelter or cover," she said. "These children are not eating. Even the main meal is not available."
What is happening in al-Fashir? Al-Fashir has been cut off from the world by the RSF for more than 15 months. The civil war between the Sudanese army and the RSF erupted in April 2023 when the former allies clashed over plans to integrate their forces. The RSF made quick gains in central Sudan, including the capital Khartoum, but the army pushed them westward this year, leading to an intensification in fighting in al-Fashir. The city's fall would give the RSF control over nearly all of Darfur — a vast region bordering Libya, Chad, the Central African Republic and South Sudan — and pave the way for what analysts say could be Sudan's de facto division.
Besieged along with the army and its allies are hundreds of thousands of al-Fashir's residents and people displaced by previous attacks, many living in camps that monitors say are already in famine.
LISTEN TO As a child, Dodah's village was destroyed by Arab militias who targeted his tribe, the Zaghawa people, along with the Masalit and Fur tribes. These militias later became the RSF. In April, the RSF raided Dodah's home in the Zamzam displacement camp, where he alleged they set fire to the camp and even killed foreign aid workers.
"The entire Relief International staff had been wiped out, including the camp director and nine other employees. I found their bodies stacked, each with a bullet wound to the head," he said.
Mohamed Dodah (centre) fled to al-Fashir after the Rapid Support Forces raided his home in the Zamzam displacement camp. A new investigation estimates over 1,500 civilians were killed in the attack. Source: Supplied / Mohamed Dodah Reports on the attack suggested up to 400 non-Arab civilians were killed during the three-day assault. The UN said "hundreds" of civilians, including 12 humanitarian workers, were killed. But a new Guardian investigation estimates the real number of civilians killed sits at 1,500, with repeated testimony of mass executions and large-scale abductions. That number could be even higher with many bodies still not recovered from the camp, now controlled by the RSF. Dodah fled to the last city in Darfur, not under RSF control — al-Fashir. Now, he believes he will be killed — or at least held hostage — if the city falls.
"If they control al-Fashir, there will be killing and raping and kidnapping. Firstly, they will kill the leaders. They will catch me, [they will] put me in a prison — if not kill me," he said.
No escape Sudanese-Australian man Algaly Abdelrasoul lives in Sydney, but his uncle, aunt and extended family are trapped in al-Fashir. He's only able to get through to his uncle on occasion, hearing glimpses of the violence. "So basically, he says this [person's] doing well. This one has passed away. This one's wounded. This one is gone somewhere. This one we haven't spoken to, we don't know where they are," Abdelrasoul told SBS News.
"This is the norm. I say tell me more. What is happening? How are you feeling? He just tells me, we just survived another day. He sees it as, I just need to survive."
When asked if it's possible for his uncle to escape the starving city, which is surrounded by the RSF, Abdelrasoul said there's no safe way out of al-Fashir. "Men — you can't [escape]. Women and kids, [you might] if they show mercy, and that's a risk — you might try to escape and they might kill you. They might rape you," he said. "If they feel like letting you go — if you're lucky enough — you might be able to escape to a surrounding town. "It's a very delicate situation. Because if you stay there, if you're not being killed by the RSF, then you're dying of hunger, starvation, lack of medical assistance is also a big issue.
"They're just holding on for dear life."
'We are watching al-Fashir be murdered' Nathan Raymond, a human rights investigator who leads the Yale Humanitarian Research Lab, has worked with the UN to better understand the hunger crisis. He said while the people in Gaza have had aid deliveries severely limited for several months now, in al-Fashir, it's been over a year of total blockade. "In the case of al-Fashir, they have been in a state of humanitarian siege now since the spring of 2024 — so over a year," Raymond told SBS News. "The famine review committee of the United Nations declared an IPC five event, which is the highest degree of famine."
While both the military and the RSF have been accused of war crimes in the current conflict, several human rights groups, as well as the United States, say the paramilitary group has committed genocide in Darfur — a claim the militia denies. The RSF also denies committing genocide, saying it was not involved in what it describes as a "tribal conflict" in Darfur.
Raymond's team at Yale have monitored alleged war crimes in Darfur using ultra-high resolution satellites and sensors provided by NASA and the European Space Agency. "It's very easy to make assessments due to the remote sensing data. We monitor cemeteries at al-Fashir and over the past year, those cemeteries have been growing exponentially," Raymond said. "We can watch them bury their loved ones from space." He said the satellites have picked up damage to feeding centres, hospitals, mosques and other critical humanitarian infrastructure. "We are watching al-Fashir be murdered from 450 miles above the Earth's surface," he said. But the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the civilians within the city may not be able to hold out for much longer. "At this point, it's a matter of time unless there's a major change in SAF's military strength "Most of the city has been reduced to rubble. "By our calculations, more than 40 per cent of the city has been destroyed by RSF bombardment and attacks and Sudan Armed Forces airstrikes and artillery bombardment to try to target the Rapid Support Forces. "The civilians have been caught in the crossfire at this point. There is no food in the city." — With additional reporting by Reuters
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As Palestinians starve in Gaza, some are turning to social media and crowdfunding to survive
As Palestinians starve in Gaza, some are turning to social media and crowdfunding to survive

ABC News

time2 days ago

  • ABC News

As Palestinians starve in Gaza, some are turning to social media and crowdfunding to survive

Buzzing flies and aerial bombardments have become the normal sounds Palestinian mother Haneen Al Shana wakes up to in her makeshift tent in Khan Younis. When the 23-year-old's home was destroyed amid Israel's continued siege in Gaza, her family churned through all its money before moving first into a United Nations-run school, then the Al-Mawasi refugee camp. Ms Al Shana says that within the past month her grandfather and cousins have been killed and her uncle died after not being able to receive crucial cancer treatment. While she fears potentially needing to flee once again from what she describes as "Israeli aggression", she says the more pressing threat now is starvation. To survive, she reaches out to the world to share her story and ask for financial help — using TikTok. To almost 3,000 followers, Haneen posts short videos about the challenges of hunger, day-to-day life in Gaza and her fears for her family. "Starvation is very real. These days, if we could find one meal a day, we would be very lucky," Ms Al Shana told the ABC with the assistance of an Arabic translator. "Before, we used to live a life where we used to have a house that protects us, and money and food, and now we're trying to survive. "Hunger is not just a physical ache. It is a constant feeling of helplessness, of abandonment, of knowing the world sees us… and still does nothing. "I'm trying to put that picture to the world… and if there's anyone who cares, maybe they could help us." In a trend that has increasingly generated online attention, some Gazans now say their only option is direct online fundraising campaigns capitalising on social media trends to afford feeding their families. In some cases, this means performing viral online dances or attaching frequently-shared audio clips to videos of their lives in a war zone. The war ignited on October 7 2023, when nearly 1,200 people were killed after the terrorist organisation Hamas attacked Israel and took another 250 hostage. In response, Israel launched a military offensive that has now stretched for almost two years and killed more than 60,000 Palestinians and at least 454 Israelis, according to figures compiled by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). On Friday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office announced that offensive would be expanding to include a military takeover of Gaza City as part of a multi-point plan to disarm Hamas, force the return of all Israeli hostages, demilitarise the strip and form an "alternative civilian government" there. The decision came after an earlier Israeli blockade of aid from entering Gaza in March, which saw food supplies become severely limited and the World Food Programme warn that 96 per cent of Gazans facing acute food insecurity. While Israel last month began air drops of aid, many Palestinians say food supplies remain too expensive, ineffective and dangerous to access. Air drops have recently been made as part of a multinational coordinated effort by Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Germany, Belgium and Canada, however previous drops have also been facilitated by the United Kingdom and Egypt. More than 1,000 desperate people have been killed trying to access Gaza Humanitarian Foundation aid sites, a US- and Israeli-backed private operation that has taken over distribution of critical supplies from traditional aid agencies Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has in recent weeks publicly denied there is a hunger crisis in Gaza, saying there is "no policy of starvation" in the territory. Since the partial easing of restrictions in late July hundreds of trucks carrying aid have been entering Gaza, although the overall number of vehicles remains far lower than the figures before October 2023. In a bid to raise money for her family, Ms Al Shana has amassed thousands of social media followers, who she appeals to for donations via a crowdfunding platform. She says direct financial contributions have been far more valuable to her family's survival than Israel's air drops. "The air drops are just for Israel, like a token, to show to the world that they are actually helping the starving people — but it's not actually helping," she said. "Financial assistance gives individuals the flexibility to meet their specific needs, whether it's purchasing medicine, specific types of food or covering daily essentials rather than receiving items that may not be immediately useful." Ms Al Shana told the ABC that access to cash is increasingly difficult in Gaza, and Palestinians are subject to transfer fees of up to 45 per cent for every transaction. "The funds are first transferred to Jordan, the UAE, or Egypt. Then, they are sent to Gaza through exchange offices that have direct contacts operating inside the strip," she said. "Currently, it is not possible to buy anything through banking apps in Gaza, which forces people to rely on cash transactions. "The only cash you can find right now in Gaza is in the merchants' hands … [and] everything is very expensive. That's if there is anything actually to buy." The United Nations' World Food Programme (WFP) says "the few remaining supplies are being sold at rapidly rising and increasingly unaffordable prices". "The primary challenge for many households is the lack of income/money to afford essential goods as prices sky-rocket," the WFP said in its June monthly monitor of the situation in Gaza. Representatives of the crowdfunding platforms GoFundMe and Chuffed have told the ABC that the numbers of campaigns launched to raise funds for Palestinians in Gaza have been increasing since the war started in late 2023. A spokesperson for Chuffed says that "tens of thousands of Palestinian families are now being supported" through its crowdfunding campaigns. "Campaign owners are responsible for ensuring funds reach Gaza. Generally they work with beneficiaries to transfer funds to local bank accounts or via money transfer services," a statement from Chuffed said. "Unfortunately the fees for these services can be extremely high and the cash conversion rate in Gaza is exorbitant. Accepting these fees is the only way to get life-saving funds into the hands of Palestinians families." A spokesperson for GoFundMe said that it has facilitated the raising of more than $US330 million ($510.3m) to support people in Gaza and Israel, with donations coming from people in 195 different countries. "Our platform has become a meaningful way for people to help in times of global crisis, especially as people look for ways to offer rapid support," a spokesperson said in a statement. The online crowdfunding platform JustGiving was unable to respond to a request for comment by the ABC. Multiple cybersecurity experts that the ABC has spoken with say they have not yet seen any evidence to suggest Gaza-focused crowdfunding campaigns are being targeted by online scammers. Board member at Palestine Australia Relief and Action (PARA) Reem Borrows said "the Palestinian has been dehumanised" and has no other options but to search online for direct donations. "This is what is called pure survival and desperation and hoping that the average person on the street is going to be able to help," Ms Borrows said. Muhammad Shehada, a political analyst from Gaza who is a visiting fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, shared the same view, saying "it's a dystopian Darwinist experiment, the strongest survive". "It's like a sick twisted mix of Hunger Games, Squid Game, Mad Max, Fallout and Black Mirror." The United Nations has said Israel is "intentionally using starvation of civilians as a method of warfare by depriving them of objects indispensable to their survival" and that it is a war crime. In July, two Israeli human rights groups — B'Tselem and Physicians for Human Rights Israel — said Israel was carrying out "coordinated, deliberate action to destroy Palestinian society in the Gaza Strip". After the deaths of six more Palestinians due to starvation on August 3, the Gaza Health Ministry said that the total toll of those dying from what international humanitarian agencies say may be an unfolding famine has risen to 175, including 93 children. The Israeli government argues figures from Gaza's Health Ministry are Hamas propaganda and not trustworthy. It also does not allow the ABC and other news organisations entry to Gaza to report freely. Jeremy Moses, an associate professor in political science and international relations at New Zealand's University of Canterbury, says confronting images of starvation shared online are fuelling an ongoing moral debate about how the world has allowed Gaza's hunger crisis to grow so dire. "There's always been questions about the use of images of malnourished children in order to garner sympathy of western audiences and what that does to how we think about what those places are, who those people are, what the causes are of the famine that is occurring and so on," he told the ABC. "These kinds of appeals are always morally challenging in some sense — people shouldn't be starving, they shouldn't be in the situation that they're in in the first place. Mr Moses says there is also an ethical dilemma facing global powers, who he believes are failing on the internationally agreed-upon "Responsibility to Protect". Known as R2P, the Responsibility to Protect resolution was adopted unanimously by United Nations members in 2005 and aims to prevent acts of "mass atrocity" such as genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. The resolution says that while each member state has a responsibility to prevent atrocities within their territory, if a country cannot protect its people the international community has a responsibility to intervene by using "appropriate diplomatic, humanitarian and other peaceful means". "Australia and New Zealand, European states, the United States, the United Kingdom, have for many decades now tried to represent themselves as humanitarian actors on the world stage," Mr Moses said. "They associated themselves with this idea of promoting peace, democracy and human rights around the world, and yet we've seen all of these countries really refuse to do anything serious in order to ensure that humanitarian aid is able to get to the people of Gaza since October 7, 2023.

'They're dying daily': Inside Sudan's besieged city of al-Fashir as famine takes hold
'They're dying daily': Inside Sudan's besieged city of al-Fashir as famine takes hold

SBS Australia

time4 days ago

  • SBS Australia

'They're dying daily': Inside Sudan's besieged city of al-Fashir as famine takes hold

In the Sudanese city of al-Fashir, women sing prayers, begging for food. The city has been cut off from the world by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) for more than 15 months. No food or aid delivery has been allowed in. Now, civilians worry the only thing that awaits them is death. "If you don't rescue us, I swear by God, no treatment or hospitals are available, only death," a woman trapped in the besieged city told SBS News. "We have nothing left for us but death." 'They're dying daily' Hundreds of thousands of people are under siege in al-Fashir, the Sudanese army's last holdout in the western Darfur region. People are running out of food and coming under constant artillery and drone barrages, while those who flee violent attacks and a cholera outbreak in surrounding areas. The city is the biggest remaining frontline in the region between Sudan's army and the RSF, under fire at a pivotal point in a civil war now well into its third year. But the RSF has blocked food supplies and sources speaking to Reuters have said aid convoys trying to reach the city have been attacked. Prices for the goods that traders are able to smuggle in cost more than five times the national average. LISTEN TO Now, residents are facing famine. Mohamed Dodah, a refugee and Zaghawa community leader, fled to the besieged city as it was the last city in Darfur not under RSF control. Dodah said people eat one meal a day — if that — and said he's surrounded by starvation and death. "If you could eat breakfast, you'll wait for the next day to eat another meal," Dodah told SBS News. "They're suffering right now. They're dying daily." What food civilians can get is poor. Some eat hay. Ambaz — peanut oil waste, which is typically used to feed animals — is reportedly now the primary source of food. But there are fears that even that is running out. Ambaz — or peanut oil waste — is typically used to feed pets in Sudan. But now, it's civilians' primary source of food amid famine. Source: Supplied / Mohamed Dodah Farhan Haq, deputy spokesperson for the United Nations' secretary-general, said civilians in al-Fashir are at a breaking point. "Local sources say people are dying from hunger and malnutrition," Haq told SBS News. "Community-run kitchens have shut down due to a lack of food stocks, and some residents have reportedly resorted to consuming animal feed." The UN says half of Sudan's 50 million population is facing acute hunger after more than two years of civil war between RSF militants and the Sudanese army. In Darfur, the UN has declared famine in 11 locations. UNICEF estimates more than 330,000 people are facing malnutrition in the city of al-Fashir alone due to a total blockade of aid by RSF militants. LISTEN TO It's becoming an increasingly impossible situation for civilians, who also struggle with shellings and increasingly more dangerous weather conditions. "One and a half million civilians are suffering from the ravages of artillery and drone shelling, as well as shrapnel from the fighting on the outskirts of the city," Dodah said. One civilian said the citizens are "suffering extremely harshly", especially in harsh weather conditions. Temperatures are hitting 35 degrees, while rain and storms bombard the city. "These houses do not provide shelter or cover," she said. "These children are not eating. Even the main meal is not available." What is happening in al-Fashir? Al-Fashir has been cut off from the world by the RSF for more than 15 months. The civil war between the Sudanese army and the RSF erupted in April 2023 when the former allies clashed over plans to integrate their forces. The RSF made quick gains in central Sudan, including the capital Khartoum, but the army pushed them westward this year, leading to an intensification in fighting in al-Fashir. The city's fall would give the RSF control over nearly all of Darfur — a vast region bordering Libya, Chad, the Central African Republic and South Sudan — and pave the way for what analysts say could be Sudan's de facto division. Besieged along with the army and its allies are hundreds of thousands of al-Fashir's residents and people displaced by previous attacks, many living in camps that monitors say are already in famine. LISTEN TO As a child, Dodah's village was destroyed by Arab militias who targeted his tribe, the Zaghawa people, along with the Masalit and Fur tribes. These militias later became the RSF. In April, the RSF raided Dodah's home in the Zamzam displacement camp, where he alleged they set fire to the camp and even killed foreign aid workers. "The entire Relief International staff had been wiped out, including the camp director and nine other employees. I found their bodies stacked, each with a bullet wound to the head," he said. Mohamed Dodah (centre) fled to al-Fashir after the Rapid Support Forces raided his home in the Zamzam displacement camp. A new investigation estimates over 1,500 civilians were killed in the attack. Source: Supplied / Mohamed Dodah Reports on the attack suggested up to 400 non-Arab civilians were killed during the three-day assault. The UN said "hundreds" of civilians, including 12 humanitarian workers, were killed. But a new Guardian investigation estimates the real number of civilians killed sits at 1,500, with repeated testimony of mass executions and large-scale abductions. That number could be even higher with many bodies still not recovered from the camp, now controlled by the RSF. Dodah fled to the last city in Darfur, not under RSF control — al-Fashir. Now, he believes he will be killed — or at least held hostage — if the city falls. "If they control al-Fashir, there will be killing and raping and kidnapping. Firstly, they will kill the leaders. They will catch me, [they will] put me in a prison — if not kill me," he said. No escape Sudanese-Australian man Algaly Abdelrasoul lives in Sydney, but his uncle, aunt and extended family are trapped in al-Fashir. He's only able to get through to his uncle on occasion, hearing glimpses of the violence. "So basically, he says this [person's] doing well. This one has passed away. This one's wounded. This one is gone somewhere. This one we haven't spoken to, we don't know where they are," Abdelrasoul told SBS News. "This is the norm. I say tell me more. What is happening? How are you feeling? He just tells me, we just survived another day. He sees it as, I just need to survive." When asked if it's possible for his uncle to escape the starving city, which is surrounded by the RSF, Abdelrasoul said there's no safe way out of al-Fashir. "Men — you can't [escape]. Women and kids, [you might] if they show mercy, and that's a risk — you might try to escape and they might kill you. They might rape you," he said. "If they feel like letting you go — if you're lucky enough — you might be able to escape to a surrounding town. "It's a very delicate situation. Because if you stay there, if you're not being killed by the RSF, then you're dying of hunger, starvation, lack of medical assistance is also a big issue. "They're just holding on for dear life." 'We are watching al-Fashir be murdered' Nathan Raymond, a human rights investigator who leads the Yale Humanitarian Research Lab, has worked with the UN to better understand the hunger crisis. He said while the people in Gaza have had aid deliveries severely limited for several months now, in al-Fashir, it's been over a year of total blockade. "In the case of al-Fashir, they have been in a state of humanitarian siege now since the spring of 2024 — so over a year," Raymond told SBS News. "The famine review committee of the United Nations declared an IPC five event, which is the highest degree of famine." While both the military and the RSF have been accused of war crimes in the current conflict, several human rights groups, as well as the United States, say the paramilitary group has committed genocide in Darfur — a claim the militia denies. The RSF also denies committing genocide, saying it was not involved in what it describes as a "tribal conflict" in Darfur. Raymond's team at Yale have monitored alleged war crimes in Darfur using ultra-high resolution satellites and sensors provided by NASA and the European Space Agency. "It's very easy to make assessments due to the remote sensing data. We monitor cemeteries at al-Fashir and over the past year, those cemeteries have been growing exponentially," Raymond said. "We can watch them bury their loved ones from space." He said the satellites have picked up damage to feeding centres, hospitals, mosques and other critical humanitarian infrastructure. "We are watching al-Fashir be murdered from 450 miles above the Earth's surface," he said. But the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the civilians within the city may not be able to hold out for much longer. "At this point, it's a matter of time unless there's a major change in SAF's military strength "Most of the city has been reduced to rubble. "By our calculations, more than 40 per cent of the city has been destroyed by RSF bombardment and attacks and Sudan Armed Forces airstrikes and artillery bombardment to try to target the Rapid Support Forces. "The civilians have been caught in the crossfire at this point. There is no food in the city." — With additional reporting by Reuters

Inside Sudan's besieged city of Al-Fashir as famine takes hold
Inside Sudan's besieged city of Al-Fashir as famine takes hold

SBS Australia

time05-08-2025

  • SBS Australia

Inside Sudan's besieged city of Al-Fashir as famine takes hold

Listen to Australian and world news, and follow trending topics with SBS News Podcasts . Women praying -singing in Arabic A prayer for food in Sudan's besieged city of Al-Fashir. The city has been cut off from the world by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces for more than 15 months. Mohamed Dodah, a refugee and Zaghawa community leader, says daily battles have wreaked havoc on the capital of the North Darfur region. "One and a half million civilians are suffering from the ravages of artillery and drone shelling, as well as shrapnel from the fighting on the outskirts of the city." But it's not the fighting that has most civilians in the city concerned. "Frankly, the citizens are suffering extremely harshly, especially in Autumn. These houses do not provide shelter or cover. These children are not eating, even the main meal is not available." The United Nations says half of Sudan's 50 million population is facing acute hunger after more than two years of civil war between R-S-F militants and the Sudanese army. In the western region of Darfur the U-N has declared famine in 11 locations, with UNICEF estimating more than 330,000 people are facing malnutrition in the city of Al-Fashir alone due to a total blockade of aid by R-S-F militants. Nathaniel Raymond, a human rights investigator who leads the Yale Humanitarian Research Lab, has worked with the U-N to better understand the hunger crisis. " In Gaza, people have been without aid delivery for three months. In the case of Al-Fashir, they have been in a state of humanitarian siege now since the spring of 2024 so over a year. The famine review committee of the United Nations declared an IPC five event, which is the highest degree of famine, which our team at the Humanitarian Research Lab at Yale assisted them in declaring the situation." UN spokesman Farhan Haq says civilians in Al-Fashir are at a breaking point. "Local sources say people are dying from hunger and malnutrition. Community-run kitchens have shut down due to lack of food stocks, and some residents have reportedly resorted to consuming animal feed." Mohamed Dodah says peanut oil waste, typically used for pet feed, is the primary source of food in Al-Fashir and locals are allowed only one meal a day. "If you got eat breakfast, you'll wait for next day to eat another meal even if breakfast or lunch. They're suffering right now. They're dying daily." As a child, Mohamed's village was destroyed by Arab militias who targeted his tribe, the Zaghawa people, along with the Masalit and Fur tribes. These militias later became the Rapid Support Forces. In April, the RSF raided Mohamed's home in the Zamzam displacement camp, where he says they set fire to the camp and even killed foreign aid workers. "The entire Relief International staff had been wiped out, including the camp director and nine other employees. I found their bodies stacked, each with a bullet wound to the head." Mohamed fled to the last city in Darfur not under RSF control - Al-Fashir. While both the military and the RSF have been accused of war crimes in the current conflict, some human rights groups as well as the United States say the paramilitary group has committed genocide in Darfur - a claim the militia denies. Nathaniel Raymond's team at Yale have monitored alleged war crimes in Darfur using ultra high resolution satellites and sensors provided by NASA and the European Space Agency. "It's very easy to make assessments due to the remote sensing data. We monitor cemeteries and Al-Fashir and over the past year those cemeteries have been growing exponentially. We can watch them bury their loved ones from space. Additionally, we can see damage to feeding centres, hospitals, mosques, and other critical humanitarian infrastructure. We are watching Al-Fashir be murdered from 450 miles above the Earth's service." Algaly Abdelrasoul lives in Sydney but his uncle, aunt and extended family are trapped in the city. He's only able to get through to his uncle on occasion, hearing glimpses of the violence. "So basically he says this one's doing well. This one has passed away. This one's wounded. This one is gone somewhere. This one we haven't spoken to, we don't know where they are. This is kind of the norm. I say tell me more. What is happening? How are you feeling? He just tells me, you know what, we just survived another day. He sees it as I just need to survive." When asked if it's possible for his uncle to escape the starved city, which is surrounded by the RSF, he says there's no safe way out of Al-Fashir. "Men, you can't. Women and kids, if they show mercy and that's a risk. They might kill you, they might rape you. If they feel like letting you go, if you're lucky enough, you might be able to escape to a surroundings town. It's a very delicate situation. Because if you stay in, if you're not being killed by the RSF, you're dying of hunger, starvation, lack of medical assistance is also a big issue. They're just holding on for dear life." But the Sudanese Armed Forces and the civilians within the city may not be able to hold out for much longer. "At this point, it's a matter of time unless there's a major change in SAF's military strength. Most of the city has been reduced to rubble. By our calculations, more than 40 per cent of the city has been destroyed by RSF bombardment and attacks and Sudan, armed forces airstrikes and artillery bombardment to try to target the rapid support forces. The civilians have been caught in the crossfire at this point. There is no food in the city." Mohamed Dodah believes he will be killed, or at a minimum held hostage, if the city falls. "If they control Al-Fashir, there will be killing and raping and kidnapping. Firstly, they will kill the leaders. They will catch me, put me in a prison and - if not kill me - you will need money to free me." And after peace talks between regional powers broke down in Washington last week, the desperate civilians of Al-Fashir are begging the world to intervene and finally break the 15-month siege. "If you don't rescue us, I swear by God, no treatment or hospitals are available, only death. We have nothing left for us but death."

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