
International community must urgently respond to humanitarian crisis in Sudan
The international community must act urgently to end the conflict which is driving the world’s largest humanitarian crisis in Sudan, and provide the funding needed to respond to the escalating humanitarian needs.
“Currently 30 million people are in need of humanitarian support in Sudan, 11.5 million people have been forced from their homes by the conflict, and levels of hunger and disease are soaring,” Concern’s Horn of Africa regional director, Amina Abdulla, said. “Famine has been detected in at least five areas and a further 17 areas are at risk of famine.”
“Yet after two years of conflict this crisis is continuing to deteriorate, against the background of a widening gap between the funding needed to meet growing needs and the money received.”
Concern is calling on the international community to:
- Renew humanitarian diplomacy at the highest level to end the conflict, to increase pressure on all parties to resume talks, cease the fighting, and ensure the protection of civilians.
- Prioritize humanitarian access to fight famine and address the immediate needs of millions of vulnerable people. Donors and UN member states must redouble efforts to ensure that the conflict parties facilitate rapid, unimpeded, and safe access for humanitarian actors and supplies across conflict lines and cross-border through all entry points.
- Close the funding gap. Sudan’s 2025 Humanitarian Response Plan calls for USD$4.16 billion to reach 20.9 million people in need in Sudan. As of April 8, this response plan is only 10% funded. Funding projections for 2025 are bleak as key donors announce cuts to their foreign aid spending.
Concern's Response
Concern is responding on the ground, both within Sudan and in neighboring Chad and South Sudan where millions of people have crossed in search of safety and humanitarian assistance.
In Sudan, its teams work in West Darfur, West Kordofan, South Kordofan, and Port Sudan. Concern is supporting and supplying health and nutrition services in clinics across the country and has reached 93 facilities since the start of the conflict. The clinics are treating acutely malnourished children, pregnant women, and new mothers. They are also providing wider health services and have reached over 234,000 people with health and nutrition support.
In addition, Concern is delivering cash assistance, food aid, and essential emergency items, including pots, pans, blankets, tarpaulin, soap, and menstrual pads, to displaced families.
In total, Concern has reached more than 350,000 people across all areas of operation since April 2023.
Concern is also responding in South Sudan and Chad where over two million people have crossed since the conflict began in April, 2023.
Chad
In eastern Chad, more than 931,000 people have crossed the border since the conflict began.
The response also includes:
- Supporting primary health and nutrition services to displaced people and host communities;
- Building 50 boreholes to provide safe drinking water in displaced sites and surrounding villages for more than 104,000 people;
- Supporting communities by providing cash transfers and programs to help create sustainable livelihoods and income-generating activities for more than 10,800 households;
- Supporting access to primary schools close to displacement sites in Sila, by providing additional teachers, school kits, small rehabilitation and classroom furniture and psychosocial activities.
South Sudan
Over one million people have crossed into South Sudan since the conflict began.
Concern’s response includes:
- Life-saving cash assistance to over 11,500 people, with the support of Irish Aid;
- Distributing shelter materials and household items such as plastic sheeting, blankets, mosquito nets, cooking sets and solar lamps;
- Building latrines, drilling boreholes and rehabilitating damaged bore holes;
- Operating five mobile health clinics.