GENEVA / SUDAN DISPLACED RETURN
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STORY: GENEVA / SUDAN DISPLACED RETURN
TRT: 02:41
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 25 JULY 2025 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
1. Wide shot, exterior, UN flag alley
2. Wide shot, podium, journalists, press room
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Othman Belbeisi, Regional Director, International Organization for Migration (IOM):
“The majority of returns has been to Al-Jazirah (also spelled Gezira), almost 71 percent and then 13 percent to Sennar and so far, eight percent to Khartoum. We expect about 2.1 million to return to Khartoum by the end of this year, but this will depend on many factors, especially the security situation and the ability to restore services in a timely manner.”
4. Close up, participant
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Othman Belbeisi, Regional Director, International Organization for Migration (IOM):
“An old man approached us during our visit to say ‘our needs are simple. What we're talking about is food, water, healthcare and education, since this is the future of our children’ and we really need to invest in this future.”
6. Med shot, speakers
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Luca Renda, Sudan Resident Representative, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP):
“There are essential services like the restoration of electricity and the restoration of water and the repair, rehabilitation of health facilities. Just to give you an idea, there is about 1700 wells that need to be rehabilitated, and they need power and solarization here is a great solution. There are at least six hospitals that require urgent rehabilitation and repair and a number of primary health centers.”
8. Close up, journalist
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Luca Renda, Sudan Resident Representative, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP):
“There are hundreds of thousands, if no more, of unexploded ordnance in the city. So, the local Mine Action Authority, with the support of the UN Mine Action service, started the decontamination. Even in our own office, we found literally, hundreds of UXO and they now start to be cleared.”
10. Med shot, speakers
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Mamadou Dian Balde, Regional Refugee Coordinator for the Sudan Crisis, UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR):
“As we speak about places of relative safety inside Sudan, there are places where we still have active conflict: in the Darfurs, in the Kordofans. In the Darfurs, they keep producing refugees, over 800,000.” 12. Close up, journalist
13. SOUNDBITE (English) Mamadou Dian Balde, Regional Refugee Coordinator for the Sudan Crisis, UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR):
“The regional refugee response plan is only funded at 17 percent. So, in a nutshell, we need to support people who can return to areas where we have relative safety and people are asking us for support: authorities we meet, government officials we meet, returnees we see, this is what they are asking. People who are in refuge still need greater support from our side and overall, I can't agree more with Othman, we need peace, we need peace, we need peace so that this brutal conflict will end.”
14. Wide shot, podium
As conflict rages on across parts of Sudan, pockets of relative safety have emerged in the past four month, spurring more than one million internally displaced Sudanese to make their way home, said the International Organization for Migration (IOM) today (25 Jul) to the press in Geneva.
A further 320,000 cross-border refugees have come back to Sudan since last year, mainly from Egypt and South Sudan, to assess the current situation before deciding to return to their country for good.
“The majority of returns has been to Al-Jazirah (also spelled Gezira), almost 71 percent; and then 13 percent to Sennar and, so far, 8 percent to Khartoum,” said Othman Belbeisi, IOM Regional Director, speaking from Port Sudan.
Most of the Internally Displaced People, or IDPs, are from Sudan’s capital, Kharthoum.
“We expect about 2.1 million to return to Khartoum by the end of this year, but this will depend on many factors, especially the security situation and the ability to restore services in a timely manner,” Belbeisi explained.
Since the current conflict began in April 2023, more than 12 million people - the equivalent of the entire population of Chile, or of Russia’s capital Moscow - have been forcibly displaced, making it the largest displacement crisis in the world.
Almost five million people have sought refuge in neighbouring countries.
Sudan’s military took control of Greater Khartoum region including the capital in May of this year, after a long-running battle against the Rapid Support Forces in the western and southern areas.
The brutal conflict has pushed parts of the country into famine.
Sudanese are now returning to areas that are accessible, but the impact of more than two years of violent conflict is immense.
During a recent visit by UN representatives to Khartoum, an old man approached them to stress their needs are simple.
“Food, water, healthcare --and education, since this is the future of our children and we really need to invest in this future,” the old man insisted, according to IOM Regional Director.
Efforts are underway to support returnees in their choice to go back.
It is a race against time to clear the rubble, provide essential services like clean water, power and boost capacities of health facilities to prevent the spread of deadly diseases such as cholera.
“There are about 1’700 wells that need to be rehabilitated, and they need power and solarization here is a great solution,” explained Luca Renda, Sudan Resident Representative for the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
The United Nations Development Programme aims at developing long-term solutions for war-displaced people to secure livelihoods and basic services.
“There are at least six hospitals that require urgent rehabilitation and repair and a number of primary health centers,” he continued. Transport and cash for food, hygiene kits, medicines and clothes are also distributed to vulnerable people arriving in border areas.
Mine clearance is another urgent challenge facing the capital, Khartoum, if rehabilitation and reconstruction are to begin. “There are hundreds of thousands, if not more, of unexploded ordnance in the city”, said Renda.
“The local Mine Action Authority, with the support of the UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS), started the decontamination. Even in our own office, we found literally hundreds of unexploded ordnances (UXO),” he stressed.
It will take years to fully decontaminate the city from this deadly debris of war.
UNDP estimates that the United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS) will need at least USD 10 million to be able to deploy the required number of demining teams to work in partnership with the national authorities and inform the population about the risks of unexploded ordnance.
As of 21 July 2025, aid agencies, including the UN, have only received 23 percent of the USD 4.2 billion required to deliver life-saving aid to the nearly 21 million vulnerable people inside Sudan.
Despite the recent returns, hundreds of people daily continue to flee - both within Sudan and across its borders - due to the ongoing conflict.
This is especially true in the Darfur and Kordofan regions, according to the UN refugee agency (UNHCR).
“In the Darfurs, they keep producing refugees, over 800,000” since the beginning of the conflict, said Mamadou Dian Balde, UNHCR Regional Refugee Coordinator for the Sudan Crisis.
According to the UN refugee agency, USD 1.8 billion are needed to support 4.8 million people who have fled Sudan to neighbouring countries, but only 17 percent of that money has been made available.
“People who are refugees still need greater support from our side,” Balde said.
“And overall, we need peace, we need peace, we need peace, so that this brutal conflict ends,” he concluded.









