Sudan residents are forced to survive in harsh conditions in the refugee camps, fleeing the Civil War on the country.
Inhabitants of the camps, including from extreme weather, lack of food and lack of medical services.
Anadolu agency captured a difficult position of displaced persons from the drone in the Goz Al-Haj camp, where thousands of people found shelter.
located in the city of Shendi, north of the capital of the country of Hartum, over the past two months the camp has become a house for almost 8,000 Sudanese refugees. About 300 tents are installed here.
In an interview with an anadol correspondent, the Abdulbaki living in the camp of Favvaz described life in the GOZ al-Haj.
“After the SBR (quick response forces) entered our village, our life turned into hell. They treated us as if we were not people. We had to leave our houses, our savings – and run away With nothing.
According to him, despite the help from some humanitarian organizations and philanthropists, it is far from enough to satisfy the needs of those who have found a shelter in the camp. The interlocutor of the agency called on international organizations to support the suffering of people.
A teacher named Khalid Mohammed Jafar, who was living in the camp, told how the SBR forces penetrated his community, causing great suffering to its population. “They lived in our homes, beat us and demanded gold, weapons and mobile phones. They even encroached on our honor,” Jafar said.
To be saved, Jafar and other residents of the village began a debilitating journey, overcoming in difficult conditions many kilometers with children, old people and patients.
“On the way, women gave birth under the trees. The children swelled their legs and several of them died. My mother also died because of a heavy road and a long distance,” says Jafar.
According to him, the inhabitants of the camp are fighting a lack of food, cold and illness. Jafar added that the bites of scorpions and snakes are a significant threat.
Collisions between the army and the quick response forces in Sudan lasts on October 15, 2023. The conflict in the country began after the overthrow of the 30-year reign of Omar al-Bashir as a result of the popular uprising.
All attempts to resolve the conflict were unsuccessful.
According to the UN, as a result of clashes in Sudan, where the world’s largest crisis of forced relocation and hunger is observed, more than 20 thousand people were killed. The number of Sudanese who left the country since the beginning of the war in April 2023 exceeded 3 million. More than 11 million people became forced immigrants, and more than 25 million need humanitarian assistance.