GENEVA / SUDAN THREE YEARS WAR

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As Sudan nears three years of a brutal civil war, millions remain displaced and hungry while the health system lies in ruins, with no end to the violence in sight, UN agencies said. UNTV CH / FILE
Description

STORY: GENEVA / SUDAN THREE YEARS WAR
TRT: 06:19
SOURCE: UNTV CH / FILE
RESTRICTIONS: CREDIT UNHCR FOOTAGE ON SCREEN
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 10 APRIL 2026 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND / FILE

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Shotlist

1. Wide shot, exterior Palais des Nations, Flag Alley
2. Wide shot, speakers at the podium of the press conference; speaker on screens; journalists in the Press room
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Marie-Helene Verney, Representative of the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Sudan:
“A quarter of the population of the country has been displaced since the start of the fighting. That's about 14 million people.”
4. Wide shot, speaker on screens and journalists in the Press room.
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Marie-Helene Verney, Representative of the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Sudan:
“Nine million are internally displaced. The rest, around four million, are in neighboring countries, mostly Chad, South Sudan and Egypt.”
6. Med shot, speaker on screens and journalists in the Press room.
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Marie-Helene Verney, Representative of the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Sudan:
“As we speak, we still have fighting ongoing in large parts of the country, very much this year in three states that are called the Kordofans, fighting still ongoing in Darfur and also in Blue Nile. And one thing to note is the increased use of aerial bombardments and drone attacks.”
8. Med shot, speakers at the podium of the press conference and journalists in the Press room.
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Marie-Helene Verney, Representative of the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Sudan:
“Women and girls are particularly at risk, at risk first and foremost, but not only, of conflict-related sexual violence. We are seeing unfortunately conflict-related sexual violence that often takes place when they are trying to run for safety.”
10. Med shot, speaker on screens and journalists in the Press room.
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Hongjie Yang, Representative of Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN (FAO) in Sudan:
“21 million Sudanese now are facing acute food insecurity, including 6.3 million in most extreme condition that is emergency and catastrophe. The situation remains dire for the rural households, particularly in the conflict region such as Darfur, Kordofan.”
12. Wide shot, journalists and technicians in the Press room
13. SOUNDBITE (English) Hongjie Yang, Representative of Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN (FAO) in Sudan:
“State of Khartoum is the second-largest producer of vegetables and fruits, and a lot of fattening farms and slaughtering houses before the war were located here in Khartoum but destroyed by the war. The destruction most severe is the destruction for the essential veterinary laboratory so that now the vaccine for the livestock cannot be produced locally.”
14. Wide shot, speakers at the podium of the press conference; speaker on screens; journalists in the Press room
15. SOUNDBITE (English) Dr Shible Sahbani, Representative of the World Health Organization (WHO) in Sudan:
“During the three years of war, WHO has verified and documented more than 200 attacks that led to more than 2,000 deaths, that's exactly 2,052. Just this year, the first quarter of [20]26, we've recorded and verified 16 attacks on healthcare, leading to almost 200 deaths and more than 300 injuries.”
16. Med shot, speaker on screens and journalists in the Press room
17. SOUNDBITE (English) Dr Shible Sahbani, Representative of the World Health Organization (WHO) in Sudan:
“Most of the agencies like WHO have our main hub, logistics hub, in UAE and with what's happening now, it's really impacting our capacity to respond in terms of time, in terms of cost as well, fortunately we had some supplies in the country to be able to respond immediately, but the problem is that now we are using our stocks and we need additional supplies to come in.”
18. Med shot, journalists in the Press room
19. Various shots, journalist in the Press room

FILE - UNHCR – 10 FEBRUARY 2026, RENK, JODA BORDER, SOUTH SUDAN

20. Med shot, water containers being filled
21. Med shot, girl putting her water container on a donkey
22. Wide shot, girl on a donkey taking her water home
23. Wide shot, border crossing between Sudan and South Sudan
24. Med shot, stop sign at the crossing
25. Close up, South Sudan flag
26. Wide shot, People walking at the border crossing
27. Med shot, UNHCR staff talking with people at the border
28. Various shots of little girls washing clothes at a water point
29. Med shot, girl waking clothes
30. Wide shot, Sudanese family seated outside temporary accommodation at the transit site
31. Various, slow-motion, Sudanese man
32. Wide shot, UNHCR Transit center

FILE - UNHCR – 09 FEBRUARY 2026, UNHCR TRANSIT CENTRE, RENK, SOUTH SUDAN

33. Med shot, UNHCR staff sitting and talking with returnees and refugees
34. Med shot, girl kneating at the transit centre
35. Med shot, Sudanese woman at the centre
36. Various shots, people at a water point

FILE - UNHCR – 10 FEBRUARY 2026, UNHCR TRANSIT CENTRE, RENK, SOUTH SUDAN

37. Wide shot, refugees and returnees gathered outside with their belongings getting ready to embark on a bus
38. Truck full of returnees and refugees departing to the port
39. Med shot, people’s belongings waiting to be put on the truck
40. Med shot, people loading bags on the truck
41. Wide shot, people getting onto the truck
42. Med shot, refugees and returnees climbing onto the truck
43. Wide shot, truck with refugees/ retunees leaving for the port

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Storyline

As Sudan nears three years of a brutal civil war, millions remain displaced and hungry while the health system lies in ruins, with no end to the violence in sight, UN agencies said on Friday (10 Apr).

Speaking from Khartoum, the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR)’s representative in the country Marie-Helene Verney told reporters that since the start of the conflict between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) on 15 April 2023, some 14 million people, or a quarter of the population, have been forced to flee, with 9 million remaining displaced inside Sudan and 4.4 million across borders, primarily in Chad, South Sudan and Egypt.

“Unfortunately, we are not seeing clear progress towards any resolution,” she said, stressing that fighting is still ongoing in large parts of the country: the Kordofans, Darfur and Blue Nile State.

“One thing to note is the increased use of aerial bombardments and drone attacks,” she added.

Airstrikes have been targeting civilian infrastructure “with no warnings,” Verney said, and serious human rights violations have continued, including massacres, forced recruitment and arbitrary arrests.

Women and girls are particularly at risk of conflict-related sexual violence which “often takes place when they are trying to run for safety,” she added.

In February the UN Human Rights Office (OHCHR) said that over 500 victims of sexual violence were identified in 2025 alone, while a record 11,300 civilians were killed that year while many thousands remained missing or unidentified.

The world’s largest displacement crisis is also a hunger crisis, as the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)’s representative in Sudan Hongjie Yang pointed out, stressing that 21 million Sudanese are now facing acute food insecurity, including 6.3 million in the most dire state of food emergency.

Rural households in conflict areas such as Darfur and the Kordofans are particularly under pressure, he said.
Food production capacities have been largely destroyed, specifically in the state of Khartoum, Yang added, while the wrecked veterinary laboratory cannot produce vaccines for livestock.

Meanwhile essential health services in the country have been “shattered,” Dr Shible Sahbani, World Health Organization (WHO) representative in Sudan told reporters.

Over 40 per cent of the country’s population require urgent health assistance, hospitals are overflowing with patients and disease outbreaks are widespread, he said.

Access to healthcare is all the more difficult as attacks on remaining functional hospitals have rendered them non-functional.

In three years of war WHO has verified and documented more than 200 attacks on healthcare which led to 2,052 deaths, Dr Sahbani said, while health workers have been killed, injured, detained and tortured.

The UN health agency official also highlighted the recent impacts of the war in the Middle East on the provision of humanitarian aid to Sudan.

“Most of the agencies, like WHO, have our main logistics hub in the United Arab Emirates and with what's happening now, it's really impacting our capacity to respond” as humanitarian supply routes have been cut and shipping aid has become slower and more costly.

“Fortunately, we had some supplies in the country to be able to respond immediately… but now we are using our stocks and we need additional supplies to come in,” he said.

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30124
Production Date
Creator
UNTV CH / UNHCR
Alternate Title
unifeed260410d
Subject Topical
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MAMS Id
3554864
Parent Id
3554864