The conflict in Sudan, ongoing since April 2023, has pushed the country’s public health system to the edge of complete collapse. This video provides a clear and investigative breakdown of how Sudan’s hospitals, medical supply chains, and disease surveillance systems have been systematically dismantled, leaving millions without lifesaving care.
As the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) fight for control, over 70% of hospitals in conflict areas are now nonfunctional. Major urban centers including Khartoum, El Geneina, and El Fasher have seen their key medical facilities bombed, looted, or occupied by armed groups. Critical hospitals such as Al Shaab Hospital and Saudi Hospital can no longer operate, and drone strikes have killed both civilians and health workers.
According to Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), there have been 622 documented attacks on Sudan’s healthcare system by June 2025, including destruction of facilities, killing of 147 medical staff, and more than 100 injuries. The World Health Organization warns that the occupation of hospitals has halted essential laboratory testing, crippled diagnostics, and blocked vital humanitarian access.
Sudan’s pre-existing health worker shortage only worsens the crisis. With just four doctors per 10,000 people before the war, the conflict has displaced or killed many remaining staff. Hospitals that continue to function face power outages, supply shortages, and unsafe conditions.
This collapse has fueled severe outbreaks of cholera, malaria, measles, polio, and dengue fever. Cholera alone accounts for over 120,000 confirmed cases and more than 3,000 deaths. The breakdown of clean water systems, sanitation, and vaccination programs has exposed nearly all Sudanese states to dangerous epidemic conditions.
The humanitarian crisis is enormous:
30+ million Sudanese need humanitarian assistance
12 million people displaced inside the country
3.3 million refugees fleeing into Chad, South Sudan, Ethiopia, and beyond
Despite this, the humanitarian response remains underfunded, with barely half of required resources secured. UN Secretary-General António Guterres calls the situation a “catastrophe of staggering scale and brutality.” Aid groups, including MSF and the International Rescue Committee, warn Sudan is facing one of the largest humanitarian disasters ever recorded.
Attacks on aid workers, deliberate obstruction of relief convoys, and the use of starvation as a weapon of war are intensifying the crisis. The destruction of Sudan’s health infrastructure is expected to have generational consequences, weakening disease control, medical training, maternal care, and emergency response systems for decades.
This video explains the situation in a clear, accessible, and factual way, calling for urgent global action, safe humanitarian access, and an immediate end to hostilities. Without rapid intervention, Sudan risks facing a long-term public health disaster with millions of lives at stake.
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