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The World Ahead | Africa in 2025

There is no end in sight for Sudan’s catastrophic civil war 

The outside world cares less about it than about Gaza and Ukraine

Two boys peer over a UNHCR aid tent as newly arrived refugees from Darfur in Sudan
Photograph: Getty Images
|NAIROBI

By Tom Gardner, Africa correspondent, The Economist

No city in Sudan besides the capital, Khartoum, is more fiercely fought over than el-Fasher, in the western region of Darfur. For much of 2024 it was under siege by the Rapid Support Forces (rsf), a paramilitary group that has spent more than 18 months trying to vanquish the regular Sudanese army, the Sudanese Armed Forces (saf), and seize control of the state. As a result, el-Fasher is where the famine that now threatens to consume the whole country began. Because of the intensity of the fighting there, it is also a useful place to look to understand where the conflict, which is possibly the biggest and most devastating anywhere in the world today, might be heading next.

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This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition of The World Ahead 2025 under the headline “Sudan sinks into hell”

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