Sudan faced ‘pride’ unless the war end up as mass starvations, the UN warns | Sudanese war news
The head of the rights Turk warns of ‘explosion in chaos’ unless the action is taken to end the war because hunger hungry.
More than 600,000 people in Sudan “on the verge of hunger” because the hunger of the stem in the country destroyed the war, the united nations warned.
UN -O’s Human Right Chief Volker Turk said on Thursday that hunger occupied in five areas across the country, including Zamzam a refugee camp In northern Darfur, where the UN -O’S World Food Program (WFP) and a medical charity organization Doctors without borders (Known for their French initials, MSF) were forced to suspend operations in the middle of escalation of violence earlier this week.
Speaking to the UN Human Rights Council, Turk said that Sudan “was looking at the abyss,” warning that hunger could hit another five areas in the next three months, with a further 17, which is in danger in what he described as “the world’s greatest humanitarian disaster.”
“Sudan is a powdery throw, on the verge of further explosion in chaos, with an increase in the risk of crimes and mass deaths from starvation,” he said, persuading the immediate action to “end the war, give an ambulance and restore agriculture on his feet.”
MSF suspended the UI Operations around Zamzam, where a refuge of half a million people sought a refuge on Monday on Monday, and WFP intensified the paramilitary group of the army and rapid support (RSF) on Wednesday after the fight.
The WFP fed approximately 300,000 inhabitants of Zamzam, but this month he reached only about 60,000 people in the midst of intensified shelling, and one attack destroyed the central open market.
Edema Wororn, UN Director for humanitarian surgery, said the UN Security Council on Wednesday that satellite images show that heavy weapons have been used in Zamba and around it in recent weeks.
The Zamzam Camp is 12 kilometers (6.5 miles) south of El-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, which RSF has been trying for months.
‘Endless cycle of violence’
The war, which broke out in April 2023, killed tens of thousands and caused what Turk called “the biggest crisis of displacement in the world”, with more than 12 million people forced from their homes in camps and other locations within and outside the Sudan borders.
Turk said that recent RSF moves, according to the establishment of the control body in areas that control probably “further divisions and risk of continuous hostilities.”
He estimated that about 30.4 million people need help, including food and health care. The Sudan health system under great stress, with less than 30 percent of hospitals and clinics still worked, and the disease spreads in the displacement camps in the country.
Cholera is currently increasing in the southern state of White Nile, killing at least 70 people and infecting more than 2,200, according to Sava The Children, citing the Ministry of Health on Thursday.
The outbreak followed after the impact of drones on the Dabakar power plant, which disturbed access to clean water in the city of the bone.
The country has recorded more than 55,000 cholera cases and more than 1,400 deaths since the epidemic began in August last year, according to the Ministry of Health.
“Children in Sudan are caught in the infinite cycle of violence, illness and hunger, with devastating influence,” said Mohamed Abdiladif, Save the Children’s Country Director for Sudan.