War in Sudan: Humanitarian, fighting, control developments, September 2025

The Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitary are currently at the end of their third year, making it the most severe humanitarian disaster in history.

According to estimates, thousands of people have died as a result of war-related diseases and hunger, while thousands more have already been killed as a result of combat alone.

As the humanitarian situation continues to worsen, there were a few important military updates this month:

Military and combat control

(Al Jazeera)
  • The Sudanese government, which had relocated to Port Sudan, is awaiting the return of its capital, Khartoum.
  • Except for El-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, where SAF has its final Darfur garrison, the RSF controls the majority of Darfur’s vast western region. According to satellite imagery obtained by the Yale Humanitarian Research Hub, the paramilitary is besieging El-Fasher in an effort to control the entire region. They are erecting massive sand berms around it from the north, west, and east, effectively creating a “kill-box.”
  • However, according to analysts, the RSF is moving too slowly and the SAF is moving away from El-Fasher, moving from the north to Bakhit (150 kilometers, or 90 miles) in the direction of El-Fasher.
  • According to Al Jazeera’s Hiba Morgan, who was based in Khartoum, an RSF drone killed more than 70 people on September 19 in El-Fasher, making it one of the “bloodiest days in the city since the RSF began its siege in May last year.”
  • With the assistance of Abdelaziz al-Hilu’s Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N), RSF also has access to South Sudan via cross-border routes, allowing it to access much of Kordofan to the south.
  • However, SAF still has control of El-Obeid, North Korea’s most important city, which it needs to hold to prevent the RSF from posing a threat to central Sudan.
  • After months of tense battles that some analysts called “Mad Max-like,” SAF captured a strategic victory in North Kordofan by taking Umm Sumeima, which is about 60 kilometers (37 miles) west of El-Obeid on September 26 and Bara, which is 62 kilometers (39 miles) north on September 11.

Humanitarian crisis

  • More than 1, 000 people were reportedly killed in a landslide in Tarasin in the Marrah Mountains in Central Darfur in early September. On September 4, a Sudan Liberation Movement/Army (SLM/A) official said 370 bodies had been found and buried in a video released on September 4.
  • An estimated 260 000 civilians have been encamped by the RSF, including 130 000 children, in locations like El-Fasher and the nearby Zamzam displacement camp, where the famine has spread.
  • A total of 24.6 million people, or roughly half of the population, are experiencing acute food shortages, according to the World Food Programme, while 637, 000 are suffering from devastating hunger.
  • Due to road closures and bureaucratic obstacles, aid convoys from the UN and other non-governmental organizations rarely travel to Darfur. Both sides are accused of using food as weapons by right-wing activists and activists.
  • Sudan’s infrastructure is in danger of developing cholera, according to the International Committee for the Red Cross (ICRC). More than 5, 000 cases of malaria, typhoid, and dengue fever have been reported in one area of the capital in the past month, according to Hiba Morgan’s report on September 23.
  • At least 50 people have died in the Mediterranean Sea as a result of a vessel’s fire in the Mediterranean Sea, which was a refugee for Sudanese refugees trying to flee the conflict.

political and diplomatic developments

  • On September 20, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres declared that “the parties must return to the negotiating table and find a workable resolution to the conflict.”
  • Alkhaleej Bank and Red Rock Mining Company, two businesses, were subject to restrictive measures by the European Union. According to the EU Council, Red Rock is “involved in facilitating the production of weapons and vehicles for the SAF,” while Alkhaleej Bank is “owned by companies linked to family members of RSF Commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.”
  • SAF military commander Abu Aqla Mohamed Kaikal, who defected to the RSF before rejoining it in 2024, and RSF field commander Hussein Barsham, who the council described as “operations that have resulted in mass atrocities, including targeted killings, ethnic violence, forced displacement, and violence against civilians, particularly in Darfur and other conflict-affected regions of Sudan,” were also subject to restrictive measures.
  • A three-month humanitarian truce, a permanent ceasefire, a nine-month transitional period, and a broad-based civilian-led government would be the subject of a proposal to end the conflict that has been submitted by Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and the United States.
  • All efforts to put an end to the war have so far failed.

Tribesmen in India’s northeast protest mega-dam plan to counter China

As an Indigenous community protested a planned mega-dam, India’s most recent move in its ongoing dispute with China over Himalayan water, the air rang with fiery speeches on a football pitch ringed by misty mountains.

By stockpiling water and preventing the release of weaponized torrents, India claims the proposed new structure could prevent China from building a likely record-breaking dam upstream in Tibet.

The project has the feel of a death sentence, but those who are at one of the potential sites for what would be the largest dam in India.

In a show of defiance of the authorities, Tapir Jamoh, a resident of the thatch-hut village of Riew, said, “We will fight until the end of time.” “We won’t permit the construction of a dam.”

The Adi people’s ancestral home in Jamoh’s far-offened northeastern region of India, which is separated by imposing snowy peaks from Tibet and Myanmar, is located there.

According to proposed plans, India is considering building a massive storage reservoir in Arunachal Pradesh that would be equivalent to four million Olympic-sized swimming pools behind a 280-meter (918-foot) high dam.

[AFP] A group of Adi tribe men gathers in a house in the village of Riew.

The $ 167 billion Yaxia project downstream of Riew on the river known as the Siang and the Yarlung Tsangpo in Tibet is a step forward for China in this regard.

Although other details are unknown, China’s plan includes five hydroelectric power stations that could generate three times as much electricity as its enormous Three Gorges dam, the largest power station in the world.

Beijing claims that there won’t be a “negative impact” afterward.

China has never intended to harm downstream nations’ interests or impose them on them, according to the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

One of the shortlisted sites for India’s response mega-dam is the village of Riew, which people like Jamoh perceive as the most immediate threat to their lives. The 69-year-old Jamoh said, “We also cease to exist if the river is dammed.” Because of the Siang, he continued, “We derive our identity and culture from it.”

India has kept its concerns a secret, even though there has been a thaw between Beijing and New Delhi, the two most populous countries have a number of disputed border areas manned by tens of thousands of troops. Indian officials fear that China may use its dam as a control tap to cause deadly droughts or defuse the Brahmaputra’s tributary, which flows downstream.

China disagrees, claiming that the hype that refers to the Yaxia Hydropower Project as a “water bomb” is “unfounded and malicious.”

India’s dam could have 11, 200, 11, and 600 megawatts of hydropower, making it the most powerful nation and reducing emissions from its coal-dependent electricity grid. The dam’s intended 9.2 billion cubic meter reservoir would be built, but the precise location of the floodfields will determine how big the reservoir will be.

This photograph taken on August 21, 2025 shows a general view of a settlement facing the potential risk of submersion owing to the Siang Upper Multipurpose Project (SUMP) on the Siang river, a proposed hydroelectric mega-dam project, at Begging village in the East Siang district of the northeastern state of Arunachal Pradesh. On a football field ringed by misty mountains, the air rang with fiery speeches as tribesmen protested a planned mega-dam -- India's latest move in its contest with China over Himalayan water. (Photo by Arun SANKAR / AFP) / TO GO WITH 'INDIA-CHINA-WATER-ENVIRONMENT', FOCUS BY ARUNABH SAIKIA
[Arun Sankar/AFP] [Adam Sankar] [A] Considering the potential risk of submersion if the hydroelectric megadam is constructed,

The Adi people revere the river as sacred, just like Jamoh, for their lush, dotted with orange and jackfruit trees.

They are concerned that the dam will obliterate the world. Before being forced to resign by local authorities because of protests against the dam, Jamoh, who was the former head of Riew, said, “We are children of the Siang.”

Residents are persuaded that dozens of villages would be completely drowned by the dam. The Adi community will vanish from the map of the world if a large dam is constructed, according to Likeng Libang of Yingkiong, a town that even officials predict will be completely underwater.

He continued, “The Adi will completely be displaced.” “We will not be where we are.”

India’s public hydroelectricity utility, NHPC, did not respond to AFP’s requests for comment.

According to Anamika Barua, a transboundary water governance expert at the Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, India’s “dam-for-dam” strategy may be counterproductive. She said that “diplomatic engagement, transparent water-sharing agreements, and investment in cooperative river basin management would lead to more stable and justifiable outcomes than reactive infrastructure construction.”

According to Barua, building mega-dams in Arunachal Pradesh is also dangerous. However, India’s commitment to building massive dams suggests that it will continue to work on this project. Other significant dams overcame local opposition.

Saudi fund, Kushner’s firm to buy games maker Electronic Arts in $55bn deal

The largest leveraged buyout in history, worth $55 billion, was made by Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund, an investment firm led by the son-in-law of the US president, and a California-based private equity firm.

The $1 trillion Saudi venture, the Public Investment Fund (PIF), teamed up with Silver Lake Investment Partners, a technology and media-focused investment firm, and Jared Kushner’s Affinity Partners, a $1 trillion Saudi company.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

A 25 percent premium over the company’s stock price prior to last week’s rumor of the deal and even a premium over the company’s record-high stock price of more than $ 179 in mid-August were reached when they reached a deal to pay EA shareholders.

EA’s shares increased by 15% from the initial rumors, and they have increased by at least another 5% since the deal was announced on Monday, allowing them to trade on Tuesday for more than $200 per share. The transaction, which places the company in private, is scheduled to close in the first quarter of the fiscal year 2027, which would ideally occur in 2026.

July 27, 2020, in Los Angeles, California. [File: Mike Blake/Reuters]

By the close of the deal, EA’s 36-year history as a publicly traded company will be over. It will no longer need to publish quarterly financial statements, and its stock will be removed from the NASDAQ.

The three sponsors will contribute about $36 billion in equity, including a 9 percent stake in the business, which the Saudi wealth fund already holds and is rolled in.

JPMorgan Chase is providing a history-making $20 billion in debt financing under the umbrella of the banking giant, about $ 18 billion of which will go toward closing the deal.

The transaction was approved by EA’s board of directors, EA stated in a statement. Stakeholders and regulatory bodies must still approve the agreement.

Due to the significant cash profits it will bring, the stakeholders are unlikely to decline the transaction, which is not thought to be affected by antitrust concerns like Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision Blizzard, which is a financial transfer of ownership rather than a merger of direct competitors.

Kushner, who had close ties with Arab leaders while he was president, commented on EA in a statement following the deal, saying, “I’ve admired their ability to create iconic, lasting experiences.

EA owns studios like Bioware and Maxis, which produce huge award-winning series like Mass Effect and The Sims, as well as huge game franchises like Battlefield, Sports FC football games, and Madden NFL.

CEO Andrew Wilson will continue in charge for the time being with the same structure and schedule.

Former US vaccine chief says RFK Jr is a ‘chaos agent’

UNMUTE

Demetre Daskalakis, the former US vaccine director, claims a “chaose agent” is in charge of the nation’s health department, which is harming vulnerable people. Following her months-long dispute with health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Dr. Daskalakis was one of the three directors to resign in August. Since then, Dr. Daskalakis has publicly criticized Kennedy, accusing him of intentionally destabilizing the nation’s vaccine program by supporting his own ideology and sidelining experts.

Suicide blast near paramilitary headquarters in Pakistan’s Quetta kills 10

Islamabad, Pakistan – A powerful car bomb blast outside the headquarters of Pakistan’s paramilitary Frontier Corps in the southwestern city of Quetta has killed at least 10 people and wounded more than 30 others, authorities said.

The explosion, swiftly followed by heavy gunfire, tore through the vicinity of Zarghoon Road in Quetta, capital of Balochistan province, on Tuesday.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

“Two law enforcement personnel were killed while the rest of the dead were civilians,” Bakht Muhammad Kakar, the provincial health minister, told Al Jazeera.

Rescue workers carry a victim’s body to hospital after the car bombing in Quetta [Arshad Butt/AP Photo]

A security camera video posted on social media showed a vehicle turning towards the regional headquarters of the Frontier Corps and exploding within seconds.

Naresh Kumar, a witness, said he was standing outside his office close to the targeted building when the explosion took place. “My mind just went blank. I got hit by shards of glasses in my arm and back. The explosion was just massive,” Kumar told Al Jazeera.

Inam, another injured person who only gave his first name, was brought to the hospital where he was treated for wounds after glass shards injured his back due to the explosion.

“Our office is right around the paramilitary building. We were working in our office when the explosion totally rocked us and then everything went dark. I could hear firing which lasted for a while before the law enforcement arrived to take control,” he told Al Jazeera via telephone from the hospital.

Balochistan’s Chief Minister Mir Sarfraz Bugti condemned the incident, labelling it a “terrorist attack”. Speaking after the blast, Bugti confirmed that at least four attackers were killed by the security personnel.

Security officials examine damaged vehicles at the site of a powerful car bombing, in Quetta, Pakistan, Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Arshad Butt)
Security officials examine damaged vehicles at the site of the bombing in Quetta [Arshad Butt/AP]

Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari issued a strong condemnation over the attack, saying, “The misguided extremists were acting on India’s agenda.” He did not give details.

India has not yet responded to the allegation. No group has claimed responsibility for the bombing.

Balochistan’s economic significance

Balochistan is Pakistan’s largest yet most sparsely populated province. Home to about 15 million people in a country of roughly 240 million, it remains the country’s poorest province despite possessing vast reserves of oil, coal, gold, copper, and gas. While these resources contribute substantially to the revenues of the federal government, the province itself faces economic hardships.

Balochistan is also home to Gwadar, a strategic deep-sea port which is the centrepiece of $60bn China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) project designed to establish a trade link between southwestern China and the Arabian Sea.

However, Chinese investments, particularly in Balochistan, have fuelled local resentments. Residents accuse Chinese firms of “stealing local resources” and this sentiment has repeatedly driven local armed groups to attack Chinese personnel and installations.

The province also has the Reko Diq reserves, which are said to contain the world’s fifth-largest copper deposits.

Canadian firm Barrick Mining has been operating at the site since 2022. Earlier this month, Pakistan also signed a $500m deal with a United States-based firm to export critical minerals and rare earth elements.

Injured victims of a powerful car bombing, receive treatment at a hospital in Quetta, Pakistan, Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Arshad Butt)
Injured victims of the blast receive treatment at a hospital in Quetta [Arshad Butt/AP]

The local resentments have fuelled a rebellion movement for decades, which aims to establish an independent Balochistan state.

As violence escalates in the province, analysts have questioned the government’s ability in eliminating the armed and rebel groups such as the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) or the Baloch Liberation Front (BLF).

Muhammad Arif, an expert on international relations, said the demography of Balochistan is complex for both the violent groups as well as the government as he pointed out a logistical challenge inherent in the province’s topography.

“It is not possible for non-state actors to take control of the region of Balochistan with its vast, difficult terrain, but at the same time, the security of each and every corner of the state is difficult for the same reasons,” he said.

Arif suggested that a recent surge in violence could be linked to the government’s counter-insurgency operations.

“It is believed that the Baloch Liberation Army and other groups have suffered heavy casualties in the last couple of weeks, with the Pakistani forces helped by Chinese communication equipment along with drones and Pakistani jet fighters. [Tuesday’s] attack could be a retaliation move,” the Quetta-based analyst told Al Jazeera.