When war erupted in Sudan in April 2023, it tore a deadly path through the capital, Khartoum. In the years since, fighters have brutally targeted civilians across the country, resulting in the world’s largest displacement crisis, with some 12 million people forced from their homes.
Today, as families begin to return to Khartoum, the scars of conflict remain painfully visible, especially in the shattered health system. UNFPA, the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency, is part of the effort to restore what has been lost.
The Ibrahim Malik Hospital has been a prominent medical training institution in Khartoum for more than 40 years, renowned for its maternal and neonatal services and emergency care. Dr. Khalid Badreldin, a UNFPA reproductive health analyst who received training at the hospital, recently visited the facility, finding it in pieces.
“I have so many memories here. This is where I built my career,” says Dr. Badreldin, pictured at left. “I performed my first surgery and delivered my first baby here. Now, I find it like this.”
“I’ve been a midwife since 1998, and I will continue to support women and girls, no matter what.”
As the war grinds on, UNFPA is assisting in efforts to restock supplies and restore services, working to ensure that women and girls have access to life-saving reproductive healthcare. Since January 2025, nearly 8,000 safe births have been supported across Sudan, and more than 1.5 million women and girls have received sexual and reproductive health supplies.
UNFPA is working with partners to provide life-saving reproductive health and protection services in areas with high numbers of internally displaced people. There are an estimated 272,000 internally displaced pregnant women across the country. More than 1.1 million pregnant women overall lack access to essential services, including prenatal and postnatal support for survivors of rape who carry pregnancies to term.
While UNFPA brings expertise in maternal healthcare, obstetric emergencies, the clinical management of rape and psychosocial support, significant additional investment is needed to restore crucial services.
“As people return rapidly to Khartoum, there is an urgent need for all partners to join forces in rebuilding a health system that has been shattered by war,” says Dr. Doghim. “Many hospitals remain out of service, and those still functioning face severe shortages of trained staff, essential infrastructure and medical supplies. Women and girls are bearing the brunt of this collapse.”
UNFPA photographer Sufian Abdulmouty lived and worked in Khartoum for four years before the war erupted. He recently returned to the city for the first time in two years, capturing the powerful images for this feature. He shared a few of his reflections.
“I returned to Khartoum after more than two years away. I hadn’t expected to come back so soon, yet I did. My memory of the city struggled against the devastation, trying to overlay the ruins with fragments of the past: a hospital still standing, a home filled with warmth, buildings that once gave the city its beloved shape. But the reality was too stark, too brutal to soften.
“On seeing the state of the city, I kept thinking two main things: Firstly, that for people to want to return to the city in this condition, they must have been really suffering where they were displaced to. And second, I was struck by emotion to see how determined people are. Having gone through so much, there’s still a way to forge forward.”
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