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Driven to starvation, Sudanese people eat weeds and plants to survive as war rages

Driven to starvation, Sudanese people eat weeds and plants to survive as war rages
Food distribution by the WFP for internally displaced persons at the Wad Almajzoub farm camp in Wad Medani, Gezira state, Sudan. (WFP/AP)
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Updated 28 June 2025

Driven to starvation, Sudanese people eat weeds and plants to survive as war rages

Driven to starvation, Sudanese people eat weeds and plants to survive as war rages
  • Sudan plunged into war in April 2023 when tensions between the Sudanese army and its rival paramilitary the RSF escalated to fighting and spread across the country, killing over 20,000 people and pushing many to the brink of famine

CAIRO: With Sudan in the grips of war and millions struggling to find enough to eat, many are turning to weeds and wild plants to quiet their pangs of hunger. They boil the plants in water with salt because, simply, there is nothing else.
Grateful for the lifeline it offered, a 60-year-old retired school teacher penned a love poem about a plant called Khadija Koro. It was “a balm for us that spread through the spaces of fear,” he wrote, and kept him and many others from starving.
A.H, who spoke on the condition his full name not be used, because he feared retribution from the warring parties for speaking to the press, is one of 24.6 million people in Sudan facing acute food insecurity — nearly half the population, according to the I ntegrated Food Security Phase Classification. Aid workers say the war spiked market prices, limited aid delivery, and shrunk agricultural lands in a country that was once a breadbasket of the world.
Sudan plunged into war in April 2023 when simmering tensions between the Sudanese army and its rival paramilitary the Rapid Support Forces escalated to fighting in the capital Khartoum and spread across the country, killing over 20,000 people, displacing nearly 13 million people, and pushing many to the brink of famine in what aid workers deemed the world’s largest hunger crisis.
Food insecurity is especially bad in areas in the Kordofan region, the Nuba Mountains, and Darfur, where El Fasher and Zamzam camp are inaccessible to the Norwegian Refugee Council, said Mathilde Vu, an aid worker with the group based in Port Sudan. Some people survive on just one meal a day, which is mainly millet porridge. In North Darfur, some people even sucked on coal to ease their hunger.
On Friday, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called the Sudanese military leader Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan and asked him for a week-long ceasefire in El Fasher to allow aid delivery. Burhan agreed to that request, according to an army statement, but it’s unknown whether the RSF would agree to that truce.
A.H. said aid distribution often provided slight relief. His wife in children live in Obeid and also struggle to secure enough food due to high prices in the market.
His poem continued: “You were a world that sends love into the barren time. You were a woman woven from threads of the sun. You were the sandalwood and the jasmine and a revelation of green, glowing and longing.”
Fighting restricted travel, worsening food insecurity
Sudanese agricultural minister Abu Bakr Al-Bashari told Al-Hadath news channel in April that there are no indicators of famine in the country, but there is shortage of food supplies in areas controlled by the paramilitary forces, known as RSF.
However, Leni Kinzli, World Food Programme Sudan spokesperson, said 17 areas in Gezeira, most of the Darfur region, and Khartoum, including Jebel Aulia are at risk of famine. Each month, over 4 million people receive assistance from the group, including 1.7 million in areas facing famine or at risk, Kinzli said.
The state is suffering from two conflicts: one between the Rapid Support Forces and the army, and another with the People’s Liberation Movement-North, who are fighting against the army and have ties with the RSF, making it nearly impossible to access food, clean water, or medicine.
He can’t travel to Obeid in North Kordofan to be with his family, as the Rapid Support Forces blocked roads. Violence and looting have made travel unsafe, forcing residents to stay in their neighborhoods, limiting their access to food, aid workers said.
A.H. is supposed to get a retirement pension from the government, but the process is slow, so he doesn’t have a steady income. He can only transfer around $35 weekly to his family out of temporary training jobs, which he says is not enough.
Hassan, another South Kordofan resident in Kadugli said that the state has turned into a “large prison for innocent citizens” due to the lack of food, water, shelter, income, and primary health services caused by the RSF siege.
International and grassroots organizations in the area where he lives were banned by the local government, according to Hassan, who asked to be identified only by his first name in fear of retribution for speaking publicly while being based in an area often engulfed with fighting.
So residents ate the plants out of desperation.
“You would groan to give life an antidote when darkness appeared to us through the window of fear.,” A.H. wrote in his poem. “You were the light, and when our tears filled up our in the eyes, you were the nectar.
Food affordability
Vu warned that food affordability is another ongoing challenge as prices rise in the markets. A physical cash shortage prompted the Norwegian Refugee Council to replace cash assistance with vouchers. Meanwhile, authorities monopolize some markets and essential foods such as corn, wheat flour, sugar and salt are only sold through security approvals, according to Hassan.
Meanwhile, in southwest Sudan, residents of Nyala, the capital of South Darfur, rely on growing crops, but agricultural lands are shrinking due to fighting and lack of farming resources.
Hawaa Hussein, a woman who has been displaced in El Serif camp since 2004, told the AP that they benefit from the rainy season but they’re lacking essential farming resources such as seeds and tractors to grow beans, peanuts, sesame, wheat, and weika — dried powdered okra.
Hussein, a grandmother living with eight family members, said her family receives a food parcel every two months, containing lentils, salt, oil, and biscuits. Sometimes she buys items from the market with the help of community leaders.
“There are many families in the camp, mine alone has five children, and so aid is not enough for everyone … you also can’t eat while your neighbor is hungry and in need,” she said.
El Serif camp is sheltering nearly 49,000 displaced people, the camp’s civic leader Abdalrahman Idris told the AP. Since the war began in 2023, the camp has taken in over 5,000 new arrivals, with a recent surge coming from the greater Khartoum region, which is the Sudanese military said it took full control of in May.
“The food that reaches the camp makes up only 5 percent of the total need. Some people need jobs and income. People now only eat two meals, and some people can’t feed their children,” he said.
In North Darfur, south of El Fasher, lies Zamzam camp, one of the worst areas struck by famine and recent escalating violence. An aid worker with the Emergency Response Rooms previously based in the camp who asked not to be identified in fear of retribution for speaking with the press, told the AP that the recent wave of violence killed some and left others homeless.
Barely anyone was able to afford food from the market as a pound of sugar costs 20,000 Sudanese pounds ($33) and a soap bar 10,000 Sudanese pounds ($17).
The recent attacks in Zamzam worsened the humanitarian situation and he had to flee to a safer area. Some elderly men, pregnant women, and children have died of starvation and the lack of medical treatment, according to an aid worker, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he’s fearful of retribution for speaking publicly while living in an area controlled by one of the warring parties. He didn’t provide the exact number of those deaths.
He said the situation in Zamzam camp is dire— “as if people were on death row.”
Yet A.H. finished his poem with hope:
“When people clashed and death filled the city squares” A.H. wrote “you, Koro, were a symbol of life and a title of loyalty.”


Israel urges EU chief to drop proposed sanctions over Gaza war

Israel urges EU chief to drop proposed sanctions over Gaza war
Updated 4 sec ago

Israel urges EU chief to drop proposed sanctions over Gaza war

Israel urges EU chief to drop proposed sanctions over Gaza war
  • “Pressure through sanctions will not work,” Foreign Minister Gideon Saar wrote in a letter to the European Commission president
  • EU executive also plans to propose sanctions against “extremist ministers” and “violent settlers”

JERUSALEM: Israel on Tuesday urged European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to withdraw a proposal that would curb trade ties in a bid to pressure Israel to end the war in Gaza.
“Pressure through sanctions will not work,” Foreign Minister Gideon Saar wrote in a letter to Von der Leyen.
The initiative, announced during her State of the Union speech last week, is due to be discussed Wednesday by the European Commission’s College of Commissioners, which she chairs.
If approved, it would freeze the EU’s bilateral support to Israel, halting all payments, while preserving cooperation with civil society groups and Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial.
According to the commission, the move would block future allocations of about six million euros ($7 million) annually and suspend disbursement of roughly 14 million euros for ongoing institutional projects.
The EU executive also plans to propose sanctions against “extremist ministers” and “violent settlers.”
“This unprecedented proposal, which has never been applied to any other country, is a clear attempt to harm Israel while we are still fighting a war imposed on us by the October 7 terror attack,” Saar wrote, referring to the Hamas-led assault on Israel that triggered the now two-year war.
He added that Israel had not been notified or consulted and warned the measures would “empower Hamas” and “jeopardize efforts to end the war.”
Diplomats say the measures are unlikely to be adopted given deep divisions among the EU’s 27 member states over Israel’s conduct in Gaza.
Last week, the European Parliament passed a non-binding resolution endorsing Von der Leyen’s proposal to suspend bilateral support and partially suspend the EU-Israel trade agreement.
Lawmakers also urged sanctions against Israel’s far-right finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, and national security minister, Itamar Ben Gvir.


UN says over 10,000 children with acute malnutrition in Gaza City

UN says over 10,000 children with acute malnutrition in Gaza City
Updated 12 min 4 sec ago

UN says over 10,000 children with acute malnutrition in Gaza City

UN says over 10,000 children with acute malnutrition in Gaza City
  • Israel has frequently bombed so-called “humanitarian zones” in Gaza, claiming to target Hamas fighters there
  • Around 150,000 people have fled Gaza City to the south since August 14, a UNICEF spokeswoman said

GENEVA: More than 10,000 children need treatment for acute malnutrition in Gaza City, where the Israeli army launched a major ground offensive on Tuesday, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) reported.
“The forced and massive displacement of families from Gaza City is a deadly threat to the most vulnerable,” said Tess Ingram, a UNICEF spokeswoman in southern Gaza’s Al-Mawasi zone.
Speaking to journalists at a televised UN press briefing in Geneva, Ingram warned of worsening rates of child malnutrition.
“We estimate that 26,000 children in the Gaza Strip currently require treatment for acute malnutrition, including more than 10,000 in Gaza City alone,” she said.
She explained that in August, more than one in eight children examined in the Gaza Strip suffered from acute malnutrition, “the highest level ever recorded.”
In Gaza City, that figure was one in five.
Nutrition centers in Gaza City have been “forced to shut this week due to evacuation orders and the military escalation,” Ingram added.
The Israeli army claims those evacuating southward to the Al-Masawi area will find food, tents, and medicine.
However, nearly two years into the war, Israel has frequently bombed so-called “humanitarian zones” in the Gaza Strip, claiming to target Hamas fighters there.
“It is inhumane to expect nearly half a million children, battered and traumatized by over 700 days of unrelenting conflict, to flee one hellscape to end up in another,” Ingram noted.
About 40 percent of the population of Gaza City and surrounding areas, estimated at one million by the UN, has been displaced, according to an Israeli military official.
Media restrictions in Gaza and difficulties in accessing many areas mean AFP is unable to independently verify the details provided by the various parties.
Around 150,000 people have fled Gaza City to the south since August 14, Ingram said.
According to UNICEF’s team on the ground, people are still moving “inside and around” Gaza City, unable to seek refuge elsewhere.
The October 2023 attack by Hamas militants resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally of official figures.
Israel’s retaliatory campaign in Gaza has killed at least 64,964 people, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the territory’s health ministry that the United Nations considers reliable.


Syrian authorities arrest Assad-era commander suspected of crimes in Daraa

Syrian authorities arrest Assad-era commander suspected of crimes in Daraa
Updated 16 September 2025

Syrian authorities arrest Assad-era commander suspected of crimes in Daraa

Syrian authorities arrest Assad-era commander suspected of crimes in Daraa
  • Shadi Smadi was a commander during the Assad regime, responsible for a special guard unit
  • The Internal Security Command in Daraa Governorate, southwest of Damascus, announced his arrest on Tuesday

LONDON: Syrian authorities arrested another Assad-era suspect on Tuesday for crimes against the Syrian people under the former regime during the country’s civil unrest.

The Internal Security Command in Daraa Governorate, southwest of Damascus, announced the arrest of “criminal” Shadi Smadi, who was a commander in the Assad regime.

The ministry of interior accuses Smadi of being responsible for the special guard unit affiliated with Ghiyath Dala, the commander of the so-called “Ghaith Forces” in the Fourth Division of the Assad regime, who is also wanted by the authorities.

Investigations revealed that Smadi played a leading role in military operations against rebels in Daraa, particularly in the city’s downtown area in 2021, the SANA news agency reported.

He was found to have committed serious offences against civilians, including arbitrary arrests, torture, and involvement in the displacement of residents, the agency added.

Since the fall of the Assad regime last December, the new government in Damascus has arrested several suspects, including army officers, for crimes committed against Syrians during the country’s civil conflict.


Two Palestinians killed by Israeli forces in West Bank

Two Palestinians killed by Israeli forces in West Bank
Updated 16 September 2025

Two Palestinians killed by Israeli forces in West Bank

Two Palestinians killed by Israeli forces in West Bank
  • The bodies of Waseem Abu Ali, 41, and Khaled Hassan, 34, remain withheld by the Israeli army

LONDON: Israeli forces’ gunfire killed two Palestinian men in the town of Qalqilya, north of the occupied West Bank, on Tuesday, the Ramallah-based Palestinian Ministry of Health said.

The two deceased, Waseem Khalil Musa Abu Ali, 41, and Khaled Nimer Suwailem Hassan, 34, were fatally shot by Israeli gunfire in the early hours of Tuesday in Qalqilya.

Their bodies remain withheld by the Israeli army, the ministry said.

On Monday, Israeli forces established a military checkpoint at the eastern entrance to Qalqilya. They stopped Palestinian vehicles and checked the IDs of the passengers, obstructing movement to and from the city, according to Wafa news agency.

The Palestinian Health Ministry announced on Monday that Sanad Hantouli, 25, was killed by Israeli gunfire near the town of Al-Ram, north of Jerusalem. Hantouli was shot dead as he tried to enter Jerusalem by climbing over the barrier separating the city from the West Bank.

From October 2023 to July this year, at least 1,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli soldiers and settlers in various towns in the West Bank.


‘Absolute urgency’ to end Gaza war, France says ahead of critical UN summit

‘Absolute urgency’ to end Gaza war, France says ahead of critical UN summit
Updated 16 September 2025

‘Absolute urgency’ to end Gaza war, France says ahead of critical UN summit

‘Absolute urgency’ to end Gaza war, France says ahead of critical UN summit
  • Elysee slams ‘atrocious humanitarian catastrophe’ during briefing attended by Arab News
  • Sept. 22 conference is result of months of joint work between Riyadh, Paris

LONDON: The “vast mobilization” of international support by Ƶ and France for the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict aims to convince the US that there is an “absolute urgency” to end the war in Gaza, the French presidency said on Tuesday.

The Elysee held a high-level briefing attended by Arab News ahead of an international conference on the two-state solution at the UN headquarters in New York City on Sept. 22.

The conference is the result of months of joint work between Riyadh and Paris, and follows a series of steps to legitimize the event in the international arena as the “only viable solution and option on the table in order to come out of this terrible crisis,” the French presidency said.

The idea for the conference “came as a result of the state visit that President (Emmanuel) Macron paid to Ƶ” last year, the Elysee said.

“We were working with Ƶ in reflecting on what kind of initiative we could jointly take in order to get a ceasefire in Gaza, an end to the war and a political solution to the crisis that would lead finally to the creation of two states and bring peace and security to all people in the region.”

A decision was made by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Macron last December to organize and elevate the proposed conference as a mechanism for implementing the two-state solution.

The UN General Assembly later voted to give a mandate to Ƶ and France to host the conference, which held its first stage at the UN in July.

That event resulted in the New York Declaration, a final outcome document that was hailed by French Ambassador to the UN Jerome Bonnafont as a “single road map to deliver the two-state solution.”

Last week, the UNGA voted overwhelmingly in favor of endorsing the resolution, which received 142 votes in favor and 10 against, while 12 countries abstained.

The French presidency on Tuesday described its joint efforts with Ƶ as “the only viable solution” to bring peace and legitimate nationhood to the Palestinians, while also responding to the “legitimate aspiration of Israel to security.”

Though the New York Declaration condemns Hamas and seeks to secure its international isolation, Israeli Ambassador to the UN Danny Danon last week accused the majority of the UNGA of “advancing terror.”

US diplomat Morgan Ortagus told the chamber that the resolution was a “gift to Hamas,” adding: “Far from promoting peace, the conference has already prolonged the war, emboldened Hamas and harmed the prospects of peace in both short and long term.”

The French presidency rebuffed those accusations on Tuesday, warning that the “atrocious humanitarian catastrophe” and “unbearable human toll” in Gaza could only be resolved “on the basis of a political horizon for the two-state solution.”

The New York Declaration lays out “both a timeframe and irreversible step towards the two-state solution that would start with a ceasefire, the release of the hostages and humanitarian aid being offered without constraint to the Palestinian population in Gaza,” the Elysee said.

As part of post-war efforts to stabilize Gaza, a reformed Palestinian Authority must be allowed to operate in the enclave through a UN Security Council mandate, it added.

The French presidency highlighted that “all the Arab countries, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation leaders and the Arab League leaders” accepted the plan, which would see Hamas “have no part” in the administration of post-war Gaza.

The PA’s leader Mahmoud Abbas wrote a letter to Macron and the crown prince on June 9 which, in part, committed to reforming the authority.

As part of the joint international project, a slew of major countries — including Canada, Australia, Belgium and Portugal — have committed to recognizing Palestine at the Sept. 22 conference.

“This is the most significant movement since a long while because, for the very first time, UN Security Council member states but also G7 member states will recognize the state of  Palestine,” the Elysee said.

“This will create a way for us to say that the two-state solution cannot be wiped out by the Israeli operation that we see happening on the ground.”

The French presidency expressed its concern over Israel’s recent strikes on Qatar that targeted Hamas leaders.

In the wake of the attack, leaders from the UK, France, Canada, Qatar, Jordan and Egypt held an emergency remote meeting, pledging solidarity with all Gulf states.

“No country should be stricken and the sovereignty of the neighboring countries of Israel should be respected. We managed to get a clear condemnation in the UN Security Council,” the Elysee said.

“But we need this collective mobilization to be crystal clear, and we hope for Sept. 22 to bring light on this international mobilization that needs to move the needle, and needs to convince the US that there is an absolute urgency to end this war.”