Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
This week two years ago, in Sudan, very few people would grow so fast or progressed so fast. What started as a violent power struggle has become one of the worst and most neglected humanitarian crises.
The country fell into the condition of mass displacement, hunger, violence and disease.
Numbers are amazing. More than 30 million people need humanitarian aid. At present, at least 15 million people are expelled. 11.3 million people were expelled in Sudan, and 3.9 million people have made this world’s largest displacement crisis and fled to neighboring countries. More than 20 million people need the opportunity to get healthually.
There are millions of individual stories behind these numbers. Parents who fear the life of their child suffering from heavy nutrition. They remained closed in areas that do not provide families, food, safe water or medical care. Women, men and children die, because it is very dangerous to go to a health center. A generation of children missing in their daily vaccines.
When visiting Sudan in September last year, I met with Soueda, who fled to his homeland and living in the world health organization (Kim) Port Sudan. He left everything he knows and said he was not in school for two years.
In one of the loneliness stabilization centers of water, colleagues, colleagues, and the youngest child, were treated for severe sharp nutrition. “My baby stopped drinking and stopped drinking and stopped his movement, and in his arms, I knew that his life was a serious threat,” he said. “I was afraid to lose him to this hospital where special milk and medicine. Now he can move, breastfeeded and can even smile. I would lose it without caring in this stabilization center.”
Again, very few of these stories reach the headlines. This silence is dangerous. It trains indifference and more life will cost.
The war, especially in difficult areas, destroyed the health system of the Sudan. In the rated States, 62% of health facilities are partially functional, and the remaining 32 percent does not work with the lack of clarity from other difficult areas such as darfurs and cordofance. Patients are unable to enter basic treatment due to continued combat and health workers and health workers.
All states in Sudan have more than three different diseases, including two-thirds, cholera, measles, malaria, Dengue and Diphtheria. The cholera led to the death of at least 1,500 people.
Nutrition is widespread among children, pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers. Fixing was confirmed in five areas and is expanded to expanding up to 17, in the rapid risk of ten thousands of life.
With our partners in Sudan, people may include the care required. Despite serious restrictions on health facilities and ongoing people, we support life-saving medical supplies, hospitals and health centers and implement vaccination campaigns.
Since the beginning of the conflict, more than one million patients with support were treated in hospitals, health centers and mobile clinics. 11.5 million children were vaccinated against Polite and Measles, and 12.8 million people received vaccination of Kolera. For the past two years, someone who supports stabilization centers, was treated by 75,000 children as a result of severe severe nutrition.
This crisis consists of a crisis with generous contributions to the Central Emergency Response Foundation, the Central Emergency Response Foundation, the Japanese International Cooperation Agency, Royal Salman Humanitarian Aid, EU, France, Germany, Italy, the United States and others. Again, continuous support for $ 135 million in 2025, 79% is unfounded.
To continue supporting the people of Sudan, we need to protect and protect the defense and protection of civilians, humanities and medical staff. Since the beginning of the conflict, 156 attacks on health facilities, ambulance, employees, employees and patients, resulting in 318 deaths and 273 people were injured. Health workers and objects should never be targeted. In fact, they are protected by the International Humanitarian Law. However, this obligations were ignored.
The crisis of the Sudan has no longer became a national tragedy, but regional threat. The conflict is in danger of destroying neighboring countries and fueling further and fueling disease and insecurity.
After a week from my mission, I was inhabited by more than 750,000 Sudanese. In search of security, I met the families who walked for days to cross the border. Some destroy their homes, destroyed the plants and the animals were stolen. Left and did not come with anything. When asked the most needed, I heard the terrible answer again and again: “Eat. We are angry.”
We can’t say what happened. The facts are clear and stories are corrected. What is incomplete is more moving. To achieve the most needed, you need enough financing to provide a high-level liability for continuous, unobstructed humanitarian access, life-saving assistance, and above all.
The views shown in this article are unique and definitely reflect the editorial position of Gazir.