‘We Must Not Look Away As The Sudan War Enters Its Fourth, Horrific, Year’
“probably the most explicitly anticipated mass atrocity event ever”. It was indeed clear to anyone watching the 18 month-long siege of the city that it was going to end in appalling violence.
But when the RSF (Rapid Support Forces) took the city, the eyes of the world were largely elsewhere, as crimes that UN reporters said bore “the hallmarks of genocide” took place. Tens of thousands – including countless children – were massacred in a matter of days.
“Sudan has become the site of the worst humanitarian crisis in the world today – and of the 21st century, full stop.”
You would be hard pressed to learn this studying the international community’s responses. The attitude of looking away implies that the conflict is detached from our concerns, our politics, here in the UK. It suggests that Sudan is so far away, so foreign, as to be essentially sealed from us. This is wrong morally, and practically too.
The UK cannot lapse into a passive acceptance of the situation in Sudan that borders on complicity. There is a renewed energy in the Foreign Office, and this week international leaders – including the foreign secretary Yvette Cooper – will meet in Berlin. Their relentless focus must be on civilian protection. As things stand on this anniversary, there will be more atrocities like those that took place in El Fasher and Zamzam: slow-motion Srebrenicas in front of our eyes should we choose to look.
The next anniversary of this conflict must be different to the last two – a moment of remembrance and reflection, not yet another snapshot of the horrors of war. In April 2027, I hope we will be looking backwards in commemoration of the many thousands who have died – and not forwards, as we do today, to the many whose lives this conflict may yet claim.
Anneliese Dodds served as the development minister and minister for women and equalities between July 2024 and February 2025, before quitting government over Keir Starmer’s cuts to foreign aid. She also sat as the shadow chancellor for a year when Labour was in opposition.
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