The Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in war-torn Sudan has unleashed yet another depopulation campaign in the towns and villages of ...
In Sudan, a brutal civil war between the Sudanese Armed Forces, led by President General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, and ...
After 19 months of conflict, the ongoing Sudanese Civil War continues to deteriorate living conditions for millions of ...
Hundreds of people fleeing war-torn Sudan arrive in neighbouring Egypt every day, a UN official said Sunday, adding to more than 1.2 million who have found refuge there, according to official figures.
Dozens of refugee families in eastern Chad are caring for orphaned and unaccompanied children amid what the UN is calling the world’s largest child displacement crisis.
Victims say the Rapid Support Forces have carried out a spree of killing, sexual assault and looting after Abu Aqla Keikel’s ...
A military cargo plane slammed into the desert in the western region of Darfur ... role of foreign contractors in the fighting. And Sudan’s military, after losing control of vast areas of ...
GOLD-rich Sudan is the coup-capital of Africa. Once home to ancient kingdoms of pyramid-building pharaohs, the vast desert nation is now the world’s 15th biggest gold producer and major food ...
Deserts generally get less than four inches ... across now-dried-up swaths of countries including Egypt, Chad, and Sudan. Lake levels across northern Africa were much higher than they are today ...
(Picture credit: AP) The lack of ratification by Egypt and Sudan - desert nations that have raised concern over any attempts to diminish their shares of Nile water - means the accord will prove ...
which allocate the majority of Nile waters to Egypt and Sudan, remain binding under international law. Egypt for instance, relies 98% on the Nile River for the supply of water in the desert country.
The lack of ratification by Egypt and Sudan — desert nations that have raised concern over any attempts to diminish their shares of Nile water — means the accord will prove controversial.