Sudan’s Khartoum needs ‘urgent’ help due to severe food shortages: Report

According to an assessment that shows the magnitude of the humanitarian catastrophe that grips the war-torn nation, 87 percent of households in Sudan’s capital are experiencing food shortages, and the city’s healthcare system has largely collapsed.

According to a report released this week by the humanitarian groups Medical Teams International and Norwegian Church Aid, less than 1,800 calories are consumed each day by Khartoum’s families.

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Between August and September, it polled more than 1,250 families and 70 healthcare facilities in Khartoum, showing that 97 percent of households are experiencing food shortages.

According to Dirk Hanekom, the country director of Sudan for Norwegian Church Aid, “the need for humanitarian assistance in Khartoum is urgent.” He warned that if the situation in the capital is this severe, remote areas in conflict zones are likely to experience an even worse situation.

Since April 2023, fighting between the military and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has devastated Khartoum.

Only 14% of women in the capital can access safe childbirth care, according to the analysis, while only 43% of the city’s health facilities are still operational. The majority of facilities do not have any necessary antibiotics, with 70% of them claiming to do so.

In what he called “unimaginable hardship,” Birhanu Waka, director of Medical Teams International’s country, said the new data should guide efforts to restore health systems.

In March, the capital’s airport reopened for domestic flights in October after the military had taken control of Khartoum from the RSF.

After capturing the city of el-Fasher in late October, the RSF still has control over significant portions of western Sudan, including Darfur entirely.

Conditions in the disputed city of Babnusa in West Kordofan state, where fierce fighting broke out this week and where the RSF claimed to now be in charge, don’t look much worse.

More than 100 families, including pregnant women and children, have been taken into custody in dangerous conditions, according to a report released by the Sudanese doctors network on Thursday. According to the group, several detainees have experienced beatings.

On Thursday, the UN issued an urgent warning that Kordofan could experience yet another wave of widespread atrocities. In the wake of last month’s fall of el-Fasher, where early warnings were largely ignored, UN human rights chief Volker Turk said history was “repeating itself” in the area.

According to The Guardian, at least 60 000 people were killed in El-Fasher in just three weeks of the city’s fall to the RSF, according to a recent report from British lawmakers. 150 000 people still need to be found.

The city is still a ghost town, according to satellite imagery shared by the Yale Humanitarian Research Lab, which has been tracking the conflict.

UN figures show that there are nearly 12 million displaced people in Sudan’s war, with an estimated death toll of more than 100,000. Sudanese people are currently suffering from severe hunger, more than 24 million of them.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio referred to Trump as the “only leader in the world capable of resolving the Sudan crisis,” while President Donald Trump stated that his administration would lead efforts to end the conflict.

British soldiers accused of more abuses in Kenya: What we know

Following years of accumulating complaints from local communities, a Kenyan parliamentary report has accused British troops who are training there of widespread killings, sexual abuse, human rights abuses, and environmental abuses.

The report, published on Wednesday, found that serious misconduct by British soldiers caused them to be viewed as something of an “occupying force” by local people.

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British soldiers have been regularly trained in the East African nation’s British Army Training Unit (BATUK), which is known for its mild weather and realistic combat scenarios. However, they have attracted rising numbers of accusations of gross violations, ranging from killings to neglectful disposal of military grade chemicals. The murder of Kenyan woman Agnes Wanjiru, 21, was the most well-known case, which attracted international media attention.

Community activists who have for years sought redress in Kenyan courts told Al Jazeera the report’s publication represented an “enormous victory” not just for Kenya, but for other African countries which host foreign military bases on their territory, but are wary of regulating them.

The Kenyan parliament has shown that the British Army is not above the law, according to James Mwangi, the founder of the grassroots advocacy group Africa Centre for Corrective and Preventive Action (ACCPA), which has been a key player in the prosecution of community complaints and served as counsel to lawmakers during their investigation.

“The impunity that has been perpetrated by these forces has been appalling. Kenya has become the first country in Africa to implement measures to combat injustices committed by African parliaments, he added.

Here’s what we know about the report, the most serious allegations against the British troops, and what will happen next:

Soldiers are seen at a camp in Laikipia, Kenya, on September 30, 2018, during a training session with the British Army Training Unit (BATUK).

What is BATUK?

A permanent training facility for the British Army Training Unit in Kenya is based in Nanyuki, central Kenya. It has been stationed there since Kenyan independence from the UK in 1963 and has about 100 permanent staff and some 280 rotating short-term troops from the United Kingdom.

According to the UK-Kenya Defence Cooperation Agreement, which allows both armies to share intelligence and training, the unit trains British troops and provides anti-terrorism training to Kenyan troops fighting the al-Shabab armed group.

In 2022, the UK government reported that BATUK had contributed more than 5.8 billion Kenyan shillings ($45m) to the local economies in which its garrisons are based, and that it employed more than 550 local staff. According to the report, local businesses that are close to BATUK training facilities also gain from the unit’s presence.

However, there have been numerous complaints from local people about the conduct of the troops. They claim that Kenyan women in the area have been harmed by improper handling of dangerous training materials and left-over, defused bombs.

Many Kenyan women say they have been left to care for children alone after British soldiers they began relationships with left the country at the end of their training.

There is no mechanism in place to hold British soldiers accountable under BATUK in the UK or Kenyan justice systems. On that basis, the UK government initially pushed back against Kenyan authorities ‘ attempts to investigate the troops ‘ behaviour.

Therefore, the Kenyan parliament approved a change to the UK-UK defense agreement that would allow for local prosecutions of British soldiers in April 2024.

What does the new report say?

Following a one-and-a-half-year investigation led by the Kenyan parliament’s defence, intelligence, and foreign relations committee, the 94-page inquiry into the conduct of BATUK troops was made public.

The report examined complaints from residents in Laikipia and Samburu counties in central Kenya, close to where the BATUK camp is. In June of this year, law enforcement started holding public hearings to hear evidence, with victims revealing gruesome tales of BATUK soldiers’ mistreatment. BATUK did not cooperate with the parliamentary investigation, the committee noted.

According to the report, BATUK soldiers displayed a “disturbing trend” of sexual misconduct, including rape, assault, and neglect of children by their parents.

It found that an internal inquiry by BATUK in 2003 had mishandled evidence and failed to provide justice for women who brought complaints.

BATUK, according to the report, has also caused significant environmental damage by not conducting environmental impact assessments for its field exercises. In at least one case, a major fire killed livestock and destroyed 4, 900 hectares (12, 000 acres) of vegetation. According to the report, BATUK also openly dumped military waste and toxic materials, violating Kenyan environmental laws.

Additionally, the Kenyan parliament said British troops showed “gross negligence” in the way they handled unexploded ordnance during their training and that their neglect had led to multiple deaths and injuries.

Communities were frequently unaware of loud training exercises, which in turn could have caused shock, injury, or even trauma.

Kenyan workers hired to clean up ammunition debris were not provided with protective gear in line with Kenyan labour laws, the report added.

According to the report, BATUK’s injured claimants received unfair compensation.

BATUK
A British Army Training Unit Kenya (BATUK) signage stands next to the road, as Kenya’s parliament accuse British soldiers of decades of sexual abuse, killings, human rights violations and environmental destruction while training in the country, in Nanyuki, Laikipia County, Kenya, December 4, 2025]Monicah Mwangi/Reuters]

What other crimes is BATUK accused of?

Thousands of serious allegations against BATUK members have been made by locals. The mother of a young woman testified in June 2024 at the public hearings that the BATUK truck driver had caused her daughter to be in a wheelchair. BATUK paid for the daughter’s hospital bills for two years, but did not compensate the family beyond that, she said.

Another mother narrated how she had been abandoned by a British soldier, with whom she had been having a consensual relationship when he discovered she was pregnant, at a hearing held by her five-year-old daughter. The soldier is believed to have since left Kenya. The woman claimed that she needed child support.

Survivors of a huge March 2021 wildfire, which started at the privately-owned Lolldaiga Conservancy nature reserve in Laikipia, where BATUK carries out trainings, also brought complaints. Elephants, buffalo, lions, and the endangered Grevy zebra are among the wildlife at the nature reserve.

The blaze, which raged for four days, is believed to have started after BATUK used white phosphorus, a lethal chemical, during a training exercise. 4, 900 hectares (12, 000 acres) of the fire that caused it to burn through the nature reserve’s grounds. It killed livestock and pushed fleeing wild animals to swaths of farm land further afield. The smoke, according to community members, lasted for days before coming out of the eyes and breathing problems.

One man named Linus Murangiri was crushed by a moving vehicle as he rushed to help put out the fire, the BBC reported.

A camp stove that had been knocked over during an exercise was most likely the cause, according to the UK Ministry of Defence in 2022.

In August 2025, the UK agreed to pay what it called a “generous” settlement to the 7, 723 claimants who sued BATUK over the incident with the help of organisations like ACCPA. Just 2.9 million pounds ($3.9 million) was reported by the BBC as compensation.

The British government has also supported the restoration of burned areas on the conservancy where BATUK exercises continue to be held.

Agnes Wanjiru’s fate, what happened to her?

Agnes Wanjiru’s killing in March 2012, allegedly by a British soldier, was the most high-profile BATUK case.

After last seen with British soldiers at the Lion Court Hotel bar in Nanyuki, Wanjiru, the mother of a five-month-old girl, vanished on March 31. Her naked body was found two months later in a septic tank on the hotel grounds, close to the room where the BATUK soldiers had been staying. By the time her body was discovered, the group of soldiers had already left Kenya.

A post-mortem determined Wanjiru had been stabbed in the chest and abdomen, had a collapsed lung, and had suffered from blunt force injury to her chest. She was allegedly assaulted, but it was believed that she was still alive when she was taken into the tank. It was not clear whether she had been sexually assaulted.

The British Royal Military Police reportedly questioned nine soldiers in June 2012, but the Kenyan police claim they received no response. Wanjiru’s family attempted to sue BATUK in Kenya, but the UK government argued the Kenyan court had no jurisdiction over UK troops.

After a Sunday Times investigation revealed that a British soldier had murdered her, and that BATUK bosses had been aware of the soldier’s involvement in her murder but had attempted to conceal it, Wanjiru’s murder case came to light again in October 2021.

One soldier who went to top officials after hearing a colleague, identified at the time as Soldier X, confess to the killings was told to “shut up”. Soldier X showed Wanjiru’s body to the soldier who claimed Soldier X had taken him to the septic tank. Soldier X, who was not among the nine soldiers the Kenyan police initially identified, also poked fun at the murdered woman in Facebook posts, the Times reported.

Following the revelation, UK government officials again agreed to assist with a new investigation.

In September 2025, a Kenyan court ordered the arrest and extradition of a British national, and in November, the UK government arrested a 38-year-old suspect, Robert Purkiss. According to the UK’s Guardian newspaper, the case may be the first in which a former or current British soldier will be deported to a foreign country to stand trial.

Purkiss served as a medic in the Duke of Lancaster’s Regiment, an Infantry Regiment based in the northwest of England, and was in Kenya for a six-week training exercise at the time of Wanjiru’s death.

The Guardian reported that he made an appearance in a Westminster court on November 7 where a prosecutor claimed that Purkiss and other local women had been “drinking heavily” the night of Wanjiru’s murder.

Friends of Wanjiru, a hairdresser, reported that she had told them she was going out to “hustle” (earn extra money) for her daughter, prosecutors told the UK court.

Additionally, Purkiss admitted to killing Wanjiru to a coworker for “sex that went wrong.”

Purkiss denied the allegations. His upcoming hearing is scheduled for December 9.

Agnes Wanjiru photos
Rose Wanyua Wanjiku, elder sister to Agnes Wanjiru, 20, holds photographs of Agnes at Rose’s house in the Majengo informal settlement in Nanyuki, Kenya, November 4, 2021]File: Brian Inganga/AP]

What response did the UK government give to the report?

The British High Commission in Kenya responded in a statement on Wednesday, claiming that BATUK had not been sufficiently represented during the parliamentary hearings.

The commission stated that it would investigate new allegations against BATUK “once evidence is provided” and that it had written statements that were not taken into account in the report.

“While we deeply regret the challenges which have arisen in relation to our defence presence in Kenya, we are disappointed our submission to the Committee was not incorporated into the report’s conclusions”, the statement said.

What will follow?

The parliamentary report recommended that Kenya’s Attorney General should immediately work with the UK government to extradite Purkiss to Kenya for the ongoing trial of Wanjiru’s murder. Additionally, it mandated inquiries into other local deaths that might have involved BATUK soldiers.

Negotiations should begin with the UK within three months to hold ex-BATUK soldiers who have neglected their children to account, the report said, and compensation and psychosocial support should be provided to victims of sexual offences committed by BATUK soldiers.

In addition, the parliamentary report suggested that developing a code of conduct that emphasizes zero tolerance for gender-based violence and environmental degradation should be given more direct control over government agencies operating overseas.

Kenya similarly hosts two US military bases with fluctuating numbers of personnel. Along with a number of other African nations, the nation frequently holds US-Africa military exercises.

Mwangi of ACCPA told Al Jazeera that the parliament’s move was a step forward for communities which have to deal with foreign militaries in Kenya and elsewhere. He claimed that BATUK’s crimes against local communities date back to Kenya’s colonial past and the UK, but officials have always been cautious when questioning soldiers because they fear the impact of any development aid from the UK government might be affected.

Al-Assad inner circle plotting Syrian uprisings from Russian exile: Report

According to a Reuters investigation, former loyalists of the ousted Syrian ruler Bashar al-Assad are distributing millions of dollars to tens of thousands of potential fighters in an effort to launch uprisings against the fledgling government.

The plot, which was revealed through Reuters news agency’s Reuters news agency’s interviews with 48 people and financial records, comes as Syria approaches one year since al-Assad’s fall and as the new government under President Ahmed al-Sharaa gains international support.

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At a crucial moment in the country’s fragile transition, the schemes are likely to stoke new sectarian violence.

Major-General Kamal Hassan, his former head of military intelligence, and Rami Makhlouf, his billionaire cousin, are now vying for refuge in Moscow to establish militias among Syria’s Alawite minority, a sect that has long been associated with the fallen dynasty, according to the Reuters findings.

In an effort to woo their loyalty, they are funding more than 50 000 fighters together with other factions.

According to people close to him who were interviewed by Reuters, Hassan, who oversaw the regime’s infamous military detention system, has been making constant calls and sending voice messages to commanders from his Moscow villa.

He reportedly groans about his diminished influence and lays out grandiose plans for controlling coastal Syria, where the majority of al-Assad’s former power base and Alawite residents live.

“Be patient, my people, and keep your arms at a distance.” In a WhatsApp message that Reuters reviewed, Hassan stated that he would restore your dignity.

According to the investigation, Makhlouf, who once used his business empire to finance the dictatorship during the ruinous 14-year civil war before falling out with his more powerful relatives and spending years under house arrest, now speaks in conversations as a messianic figure who will bring about the end of the world.

The men’s prize, according to Reuters, is control of a network of 14 underground command rooms built around coastal Syria at the end of al-Assad’s rule as well as weapons storage facilities.

Photos captured by the news agency show rooms filled with computers, computers, and other types of communication equipment, including assault rifles, ammunition, grenades, and ammunition.

According to internal documents and financial records that Reuters reviewed, Hassan claims control of 12, 000 fighters and has spent at least $1.5 million since March, while Makhlouf claims at least 54, 000 fighters and has spent at least $ 6 million on salaries.

However, the fighters are being paid a pittance, with some commanders on the ground claiming they are taking money from both sides and are making between $20 and $30 per month.

Despite the plotting, there are fewer chances for an uprising to succeed.

According to Reuters, many Alawite mistrust the pair because they are virulently at odds with one another, Russia has withheld support, and many are.

Moscow, which granted al-Assad asylum, has since changed its mind to support al-Sharaa’s government in order to maintain its vital Mediterranean military installations on Syria’s coast in Tartous, which the plotters want to control.

Khaled al-Ahmad, an Alawite and former al-Sharaa friend, is the Syrian new government’s counter-strategy, who used its own strategy during the war.

His job is to convince former soldiers and civilians that the new Syria has a better future.

The coastal Tartous region’s governor, Ahmed al-Shami, told Reuters that Syrian authorities are aware of the plots and prepared to fight them.

Given that they lack powerful tools on the ground, “we are certain they cannot do anything effective,” he said.

Syria faces a number of challenges a year after al-Assad’s overthrow, including the country’s ongoing need for a buffer for Israel, and sectarian tensions that erupted into deadly violence in March and July.

Syria’s Hama full of ‘hope, joy’ one year after al-Assad forces’ exit

One year ago, Bashar al-Assad’s allies were expelled from Syria’s central city of Hama, marking the occasion of the expulsion of thousands of people.

According to Assed Baig from Hama’s al-Assi Square, the city’s atmosphere is one of “hope and belief” in Syria’s future, according to Baig from Al Jazeera.

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People are celebrating this day as far as I can tell on roof balconies, Baig said. There is hope for the future, according to the singers, who are waving flags, chanting slogans, and singing.

In a lightning offensive directed at the capital on December 5, 2024, rebels led by Syria’s then-President Ahmed al-Sharaa took control of Hama. Al-Assad fled to Russia and was overthrown by his family’s dynasty after they captured Damascus 24 days later.

Hama, which was the scene of Al-Assad’s brutal uprising under his father, former president Hafez al-Assad, has a special place in his fall.

Government forces bombed and besieged the city while arresting and shooting young men and boys to quell an uprising there. Between 30 000 and 40 000 people, including entire families, were killed, according to the Syrian Network for Human Rights.

People are joyful, according to the saying.

Baig claimed that since his most recent visit, Hama’s atmosphere has significantly changed.

People would yell, “Back then, there was a fear that the wrong word, the wrong sentence, could lead to you being troubled, disappeared to the regime forces’ prison, or worse,” he said. People are now joyful, celebrating, and joyful.

Al-Sharaa, who was previously al-Qaeda’s branch in Syria and then the splinter group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, has led a remarkable turnaround since taking over the reins of Syria, largely restoring the country’s reputation internationally and obtaining significant sanctions relief.

Al-Sharaa, who is president for a five-year transitional period, has visited cities across the Gulf, Europe, and Washington, and this week hosted a delegation from the UN Security Council in Syria.

He took the United Nations General Assembly for the first time in six decades as a leader of Syria.

‘New chapter’

However, there are concerns about Alawite and Druze minority communities in Syria’s heartland, where some government forces and their allies have been linked to and facing charges.

More than 1,700 people were killed in March due to clashes and reprisals against the Alawite community, which al-Assad is a member of, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor.

In addition, according to the monitor, additional clashes in south Syria’s Suwayda province in July left many Druze civilians dead, according to the monitor.

Israel conducted airstrikes in Syria’s south and Damascus, claiming that the operation was aimed at protecting the Druze, a claim that many Druze leaders refuted. Israel continues to carry out deadly incursions and strikes in Syria to this day. Israel launched yet another incursion into Syrian territory in the Damascus countryside, Beit Jinn, last week, killing at least 13 people, including children.

By restoring diplomatic ties and attracting foreign investment, Nanar Hawach, a senior analyst for Syria at the International Crisis Group, claimed that “Syria has opened a new chapter that many once thought impossible.” However, “international rehabilitation means little if all Syrians feel safe walking their own streets.”

Many Syrians still view al-Sharaa as “the only option that provides guarantees,” according to researcher Gamal Mansour of the University of Toronto, who is concerned about the potential chaos a power vacuum might cause.