South Kordofan has become the focal point of Sudan’s ongoing war and a rapidly worsening humanitarian catastrophe, but international attention and aid remain insufficient, aid organizations including the International Red Cross said Monday. The crisis has intensified to the point where famine conditions are emerging in key population centres and essential supply routes are effectively blocked.
SCANS sources described South Kordofan as “Sudan’s most dangerous and neglected frontline,” warning that continued fighting, starvation and restricted aid access are driving the civilian population toward widespread calamity. “Entire cities are being starved, forcing families to flee with nothing,” he said.
In the state capital Kadugli, famine-like conditions are taking hold, and Dilling is at imminent risk of the same. Major supply routes into both towns have been severed, collapsing local markets and leaving civilians with little or no access to food, cash or basic services.
Civilians Flee in Dire Conditions
Thousands of civilians are fleeing South Kordofan in small, perilous groups, often crossing active frontlines toward the Nuba Mountains, White Nile, Gedaref and across the border to South Sudan in search of safety. International aid groups report many of them face hunger, theft and intimidation en route, and arrive at displacement areas to find overcrowded shelters with minimal resources.
One displaced woman, identified as Asia, recounted fleeing Kadugli last December with her four young children — including a seven-month-old baby — after their home was struck by explosives. Her husband, away in search of food, has not been heard from since.
Now in Thobo Camp, she collects firewood and straw to sell for food.
Aid Constraints and Local Response
Egeland stressed that international humanitarian presence in the region has drastically diminished, with most major NGOs either suspending or scaling back operations and no United Nations presence remaining in Kadugli. Local responders are increasingly the principal providers of assistance, maintaining communal kitchens, evacuating families and delivering aid under fire.
Despite these efforts, aid officials say available resources are being rapidly outpaced by needs. The organisation continues to support emergency food, cash, shelter, education, protection and water supply operations in Kadugli, the Nuba Mountains and other displacement destinations. NRC is also pre-positioning shelter and other essential items in White Nile and Gedaref in anticipation of ongoing displacement.











