One man’s story inside the siege of El Fasher, Sudan - podcast

3 weeks ago 22

By the time Mohamed Douda arrived in El Fasher, a city in the Darfur region of Sudan, the battle between the Sudanese armed forces and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) was already under way.

Over the following months, as the RSF tightened their siege on the city, Douda, a community spokesperson and local activist, updated Guardian journalist Kaamil Ahmed about the deteriorating situation.

He said: “Our first struggle is the merciless hunger, and the second is the constant artillery shelling. Even the glow of a cigarette can alert the drones that fly overhead. So once we finish our meals, there is nothing to do but sit in silence.”

Ahmed tells Annie Kelly about Douda and his work, and what it was like to speak with him in the last days of the siege.

Alan Boswell, the Horn of Africa editor at the International Crisis Group, then explains why the fall of El Fasher could be a major turning point in the two-year conflict, the significant impact that regional players are having in how the war is unfolding and what is needed to bring this crisis to a permanent end.

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Mohammed Douda
Composite: Supplied
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