Sudan has now entered the fourth year of a brutal civil war, and the silence of the international community is as deafening as the gunfire tearing the country apart.
What was once a nation struggling toward hope after the fall of Omar al-Bashir has descended into a humanitarian nightmare. Cities are ruined. Families are starving. Millions are displaced. Children grow up knowing only violence. And now, an escalating energy crisis threatens to push an already collapsed society into complete darkness.
This is not merely a war between generals. It is a systematic erasure of a people from the world’s conscience.
The fighting between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces has turned markets into battlefields and hospitals into graves. Fuel shortages paralyze transport. Electricity failures shut down water supply, medical care, and communication. This is how a country dies — not only by bullets, but by blackouts.
Yet, global attention flickers elsewhere.
How many more must starve before ceasefire talks matter? How many more must flee before humanity notices? How long will geopolitics outweigh human lives?
Sudan does not need sympathy. It needs urgency. It needs ceasefire pressure. It needs humanitarian corridors. It needs the world to stop looking away.
History will remember who spoke — and who remained silent.
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