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‘Barefoot with nothing’: War-displaced Sudanese go hungry in refuge town

Many fled a paramilitary attack on one of Sudan's largest displacement camps, seeking refu
AFP

Crouching over a small wood-scrap fire in Sudan’s war-battered Darfur region, Aziza Ismail Idris stirs a pot of watery porridge — the only food her family have had for days.

“No organisation has come. No water, no food — not even a biscuit for the children,” Idris told AFP, her voice brittle with fatigue.

Having fled a brutal paramilitary attack last month on Zamzam, once one of Sudan’s largest displacement camps, she and her five children are among the estimated 300,000 people who have since arrived in the small farming town of Tawila, according to the United Nations.

“We arrived here barefoot with nothing,” she said, recalling her escape from Zamzam camp, about a 60-kilometre (37-mile) desert trek away, also in the vast western region of Darfur.

The few aid organisations on the ground lack the means to meet the urgent needs of so many displaced people.

“Humanitarian organisations were simply not prepared to receive this scale of displacement,” said Thibault Fendler, who works with medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Tawila.

Since war broke out in April 2023 between Sudan’s army and rival paramilitaries, the town has received waves of displaced people fleeing violence elsewhere.

“We are working to scale up our capacities, but the needs are simply enormous,” Fendler told AFP.

Town dotted with shelters

Tawila, nestled between mountains and seasonal farmland, was once a quiet rural outpost.

But the two-year war pitting the army against the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has buffeted the already-scarred Darfur region.

Entire displacement camps have been besieged and razed, while the armed group that controls the area around Tawila — a faction of the Sudan Liberation Movement, led by Abdelwahid al-Nur — has vowed to protect those fleeing the violence.

The town’s schools, mosques and markets are crammed with people sleeping side by side, on concrete floors, under trees or in huts of straw and plastic, exposed to temperatures that can reach 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit).

Beyond the town centre, a patchwork of makeshift shelters fans out across the horizon.

Inside, families keep what little they managed to bring with them: worn bags, cooking pots or clothes folded carefully on mats laid over dry earth.

Some weary children play silently in the dirt — many malnourished, some dressed in oversized hand-me-downs, others in the clothes they had fled in.

Nearby, dozens of women line up with empty jerrycans, waiting by a lone water tank.

More queues snake around soup kitchens, with women carrying pots in hand and children on their hips, hoping to get a meal before they run out.

“When we arrived, the thirst had nearly killed us, we had nothing,” said Hawaa Hassan Mohamed, a mother who fled from North Darfur’s besieged state capital of El-Fasher.

“People shared what little they had,” she told AFP.

The war has created the world’s largest hunger crisis, with famine already declared in several parts of North Darfur state where the UN estimates that more than a million people are on the brink of starvation.

‘Disaster’

The RSF and the army continue to battle for control of territory, particularly in and around El-Fasher — the last army stronghold in Darfur — crippling humanitarian access.

“It takes a long time to get aid here. The roads are full of checkpoints. Some are completely cut off,” Noah Taylor, head of operations for the Norwegian Refugee Council, told AFP from Tawila.

“There are so many gaps in every sector, from food to shelter to sanitation. The financial and in-kind resources we have are simply not sufficient,” he said.

Organisations are scrambling to get food, clean water and health assistance to desperate families, but Taylor said these efforts are just scratching the surface.

“We are not there yet in terms of what people need,” he said.

“We’re doing what we can, but the global response has not kept pace with the scale of this disaster.”

Leni Kinzli, head of communications at the World Food Programme, said that a one-time delivery of “1,600 metric tonnes of food and nutrition supplies” for 335,000 people had reached Tawila last month.

But it took two weeks to reach the town, navigating multiple checkpoints and unsafe roads, she told AFP.

Aid workers warn that without urgent funding and secure access, these deliveries will even be harder, especially with the rainy season approaching.

via May 11th 2025