Middle East and Africa | The forgotten war

A genocidal militia is winning the war in Sudan

The Rapid Support Forces are gaining territory

An injured Sudanese girl, who fled the conflict in Geneina, in Sudan's Darfur region
While the world looks awayImage: Reuters
|Cape Town

A distracted world has paid little attention to Sudan since war broke out in Africa’s third-largest country in April. The West is focused on Ukraine’s counter-offensive, China’s war games and the war in Gaza. African leaders, preoccupied by their own domestic problems, have shown all the urgency of a camel crossing the Sahara.

The consequences of neglect are becoming starker. The conflict between erstwhile bedfellows—the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a paramilitary group, and the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), the regular army—is destroying the state they seized together in 2021, in a coup aimed at preventing a transition to democratic government. The IMF forecasts that Sudan’s economy will shrink by nearly a fifth this year. The war is deepening geopolitical rivalries in north-east Africa and the Persian Gulf.

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline "The forgotten war"

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