The Issue
Sudan has suffered enough. Demand Government action now.
After 1,000 days of conflict, Sudan has reached breaking point and is now facing the world’s worst humanitarian and displacement crisis.
But the world’s governments — including the UK Government — have failed to respond with the urgency, leadership, and determination at the scale needed.
Why is this urgent now?
- Almost 12 million people have been driven from their homes, with more than half being women and children.
- 7.2 million people are currently displaced inside Sudan, many living in overcrowded camps or makeshift shelters facing extreme hunger and disease outbreaks.
- Conflict has exacerbated all forms of gender-based violence, including violence against women and girls of all ages, leading to demand for gender based violence services increasing fourfold.
- Over 70% of hospitals have been destroyed or damaged in conflict-affected areas.
- Many communities, particularly in besieged areas, have been cut off from the food, clean water and medical care they need to survive.
Time is running out
Sudan is experiencing a severe hunger crisis, with millions of people facing acute food insecurity. This hunger crisis is not inevitable — it is being driven by conflict, the destruction of markets and agriculture, collapsing health services, and the obstruction of aid.
Aid needs to reach communities to save lives now
It is inexcusable that extreme hunger is persisting because humanitarian organisations are being prevented from reaching the communities most in need. In some of the worst-affected areas, aid is completely blocked.
This man-made emergency has already caused immense suffering. Without decisive action, fighting could spread even further and could destabilise neighbouring countries.
The UK has a crucial role to play
The UK has a crucial role to play and has demonstrated moments of political leadership, but its response has fallen short. As UN Security Council penholder, the UK has a unique platform to shape international action and push for stronger leadership on protection and humanitarian access.
The UK must now step up and use its influence to break international paralysis, mitigate the widespread suffering of civilians, stabilise the region and prevent an even greater catastrophe.
Leading UK charities are collectively calling for urgent action
1000 days on, KeepEyesOnSudan coalition, a group of leading UK charities including Concern Worldwide, Action Against Hunger, Age International, CARE International UK, CAFOD, Christian Aid, International Rescue Committee, Islamic Relief UK, Plan International UK, Save the Children UK, Tearfund, Oxfam and World Vision are calling on the UK government to take concrete action to end suffering in Sudan.
We are calling on the UK government to:
- Scale-up its diplomatic efforts, including through the UN Security Council, to push for an immediate, nationwide ceasefire as the first step towards lasting peace.
- Protect civilians, aid workers and local emergency responders by backing efforts to prevent further attacks, atrocities and International Humanitarian Law violations.
- Secure rapid, safe, sustained humanitarian access across Sudan, especially to conflict-affected and besieged areas, so aid can reach every community in need.
- Increase funding now, especially to local aid groups and women led organisations, to help stop extreme hunger spreading further and provide life-saving assistance and services especially to women and children forced to flee their homes.
- Support a regional response to this crisis, working with neighbouring countries to increase humanitarian assistance to refugees, enable safe cross-border access for humanitarian aid, and prevent the conflict from spreading further.
After more than 1,000 days of warnings and international inaction, the crisis in Sudan has reached catastrophic levels — with suffering on a scale that could have been prevented.
Women, children and communities in Sudan and across the region can wait no longer.
Please add your name and urge the UK Government to act now.
We are asking the UK government to commit to:
- Invest at least £500 million in nutrition-specific programmes between 2025-30.
- Maximise the impact of spending in other key areas, including health, agriculture and climate by ensuring that £2.5 billion of Official Development Assistance is nutrition-sensitive between 2025-30.
- Set an ambition to reach at least 50 million women and adolescent girls with nutrition interventions by 2030 and report yearly on how many people are reached.
- Integrate nutrition across development sectors, to make meaningful progress in tackling the underlying causes of malnutrition.
- Build on the UK's nutrition policy expertise by partnering with governments and research institutions to fund research in key areas such as preventing malnutrition and child wasting.