News
AFP journalist Abdelmoneim Abu Idris Ali holds his wedding picture as he searches through documents at his home in Khartoum ...
Sudanese activist Duaa Tariq, who spoke to NPR throughout the war, shares what its like in the "liberated" capital Khartoum, after two years... In 'free' Khartoum, the ruined streets smell of ...
About 30 percent of Sudan’s 48 million people - more than 14 million - have been forced to flee their homes due to the ...
The exhibition halls of Sudan's biggest museum were once filled with statues and relics from centuries of ancient ...
Image A family using a donkey and cart to move through the destroyed streets of East Nile, a Khartoum district that Sudan’s military recaptured from the Rapid Support Forces in early March.
Sudan's civil war marks the end of its second year on Tuesday, and the fighting, atrocities and famine are only mounting ...
1d
AllAfrica on MSNNo Return to KhartoumWhile the conflict in Khartoum has largely subsided with the Sudanese army's re-capture of the capital city in late March, the millions of the city's conflict-displaced residents still cannot return.
Abdelmoneim shudders at the thought of the horrors they have seen since. "When we were leaving Khartoum, there were bodies lying in the street and an old man standing over them, trying to keep a ...
It had been nearly two years since AFP journalist Abdelmoneim Abu Idris Ali set foot in his home in war-torn Khartoum, after the sound of children playing in the street gave way to the fearsome ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results