As the humanitarian situation in the area worsens, thousands more Sudanese people are fleeing the country’s bloody war.
According to the most recent data that the UN has confirmed, more than 4.3 million Sudanese have emigrated to neighboring countries since the government-aligned Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) joined the civil war in April 2023.
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Nearly 12 million people are being forced to flee their homes in Sudan because of the worst displacement crisis in history.
Hundreds of thousands of Sudanese people are reportedly preparing to travel to eastern Chad because they think it will be safer and where they can get food. However, they are traveling to a nation where about 7 million people, at least 50% of them children, already require aid from the humanitarian system.
Every day, thousands of families visit Tine, a border town between Sudan and Chad.
Abdulsalam Abubakar, a Tine resident, informed Ahmed Idris that the same amount of money he used to purchase food and other essential items a few days ago will no longer be able to purchase the same amount.
He said, “Nothing in the market here is cheap, everything is expensive.”
The food producers claim that the price of food is going up because of the dramatically increased demand during the most severe wartimes.
More than 10,000 Sudanese people came here after their country collapsed, according to trader Khadijah Kurgule, adding that “now food is expensive.”
She told Al Jazeera, “There are goods everywhere, but people can’t afford them.”
More than one million people have entered Chad since the start of the Sudanese war thanks to the thousands who have fled the RSF-led mass killings in and around El-Fasher.
Idris, a journalist for Al Jazeera, claimed that Sudan’s refugees’ constant arrivals have increased the need for food, shelter, and water.
He claimed that humanitarian aid workers worry that this could cause host and refugee communities to rift.
Long lines have developed at distribution points for water and aid collection, and overextended hospitals and schools have also become a common occurrence.
UNHCR representative on the ground, John-Paul Habamungu, claimed that there are no schools for the majority of the new Sudanese population.
“We lack the funds to build, at least temporarily, learning spaces. He claimed that we lack the resources to find teachers.
Aid workers have warned that the worst may still be coming as the conflict in Sudan continues to rage indefinitely, despite the UN’s efforts to relocate several thousand refugees to nearby areas.
Abdul Rahim Hamdan Dagalo, the deputy leader of the RSF, and Mohamed Hamdan “Hemedti” Dagalo’s brother, were subject to sanctions by the European Union on Thursday for crimes committed during the El-Fasher storm.
According to the European Commission, the sanctions place Dagalo under an EU-wide travel ban, freeze potential assets, and forbid him from making indirect or direct profits from other resources within the bloc’s 27 nations.







