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Thursday, May 22, 2025

Trapped by Sudan fighting, dozens of infants, toddlers and children died in Khartoum orphanage

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721 days ago
20230531
This is a locator map for Sudan with its capital, Khartoum. (AP Photo)

This is a locator map for Sudan with its capital, Khartoum. (AP Photo)

At least 60 in­fants, tod­dlers and old­er chil­dren per­ished over the past six weeks while trapped in har­row­ing con­di­tions in an or­phan­age in Su­dan’s cap­i­tal as fight­ing raged out­side.

Most died from lack of food and from fever. Twen­ty-six died in two days over the week­end.

The ex­tent of the chil­dren’s suf­fer­ing emerged from in­ter­views with more than a dozen doc­tors, vol­un­teers, health of­fi­cials and work­ers at the Al-Mayqo­ma or­phan­age. The As­so­ci­at­ed Press al­so re­viewed dozens of doc­u­ments, im­ages, and videos show­ing the de­te­ri­o­rat­ing con­di­tions at the fa­cil­i­ty.

Video tak­en by or­phan­age work­ers shows bod­ies of chil­dren tight­ly bun­dled in white sheets await­ing bur­ial. In oth­er footage, two dozen tod­dlers wear­ing on­ly di­a­pers sit on the floor of a room, many of them wail­ing, as a woman car­ries two met­al jugs of wa­ter. An­oth­er woman sits on the floor with her back to the cam­era, rock­ing back and forth and ap­par­ent­ly cradling a child.

An or­phan­age work­er lat­er ex­plained that the tod­dlers were moved to the large room af­ter near­by shelling blan­ket­ed an­oth­er part of the fa­cil­i­ty with heavy dust last week.

“It is a cat­a­stroph­ic sit­u­a­tion,” Afkar Omar Moustafa, a vol­un­teer at the or­phan­age, said in a phone in­ter­view. “This was some­thing we ex­pect­ed from day one (of the fight­ing).”

Among the dead were ba­bies as young as three months, ac­cord­ing to death cer­tifi­cates as well as four or­phan­age of­fi­cials and work­ers for char­i­ties now help­ing the fa­cil­i­ty.

The week­end was par­tic­u­lar­ly dead­ly, with 14 chil­dren per­ish­ing Fri­day and 12 on Sat­ur­day.

This raised alarm and out­rage across so­cial me­dia, and a lo­cal char­i­ty was able to de­liv­er food, med­i­cine and ba­by for­mu­la to the or­phan­age on Sun­day, with the help of the U.N. chil­dren’s agency, UNICEF, and the In­ter­na­tion­al Com­mit­tee of the Red Cross.

Or­phan­age work­ers warned that more chil­dren could die, and called for their speedy evac­u­a­tion out of war-torn Khar­toum.

The bat­tle for con­trol of Su­dan erupt­ed April 15, pit­ting the Su­danese mil­i­tary, led by Gen. Ab­del-Fat­tah Burhan, against the para­mil­i­tary Rapid Sup­port Forces com­mand­ed by Gen. Mo­hammed Ham­dan Da­ga­lo.

The fight­ing has turned Khar­toum and oth­er ur­ban ar­eas in­to bat­tle­fields. Many hous­es and civil­ian in­fra­struc­ture have been loot­ed or were dam­aged by stray shells and bul­lets.

The fight­ing has in­flict­ed a heavy toll on civil­ians, par­tic­u­lar­ly chil­dren. More than 860 civil­ians, in­clud­ing at least 190 chil­dren, were killed and thou­sands of oth­ers were wound­ed since April 15, ac­cord­ing to Su­dan’s Doc­tors’ Syn­di­cate which tracks civil­ian ca­su­al­ties. The tal­ly is like­ly to be much high­er.

More than 1.65 mil­lion peo­ple have fled to safer ar­eas in­side Su­dan or crossed in­to neigh­bor­ing coun­tries. Oth­ers re­main trapped in­side their homes, un­able to es­cape as food and wa­ter sup­plies dwin­dle. The clash­es have al­so dis­rupt­ed the work of hu­man­i­tar­i­an groups.

More than 13.6 mil­lion chil­dren are in ur­gent need of hu­man­i­tar­i­an as­sis­tance in Su­dan, up from near­ly nine mil­lion pri­or to the war, ac­cord­ing to UNICEF.

As of Mon­day, there were at least 341 chil­dren at the or­phan­age, in­clud­ing 165 in­fants be­tween the ages of one and six months and 48 rang­ing from sev­en to 12 months, ac­cord­ing to da­ta ob­tained by the AP. The re­main­ing 128 chil­dren were be­tween the ages of one and 13 years.

Among those at the or­phan­age were two dozen chil­dren who had been sent back from Khar­toum hos­pi­tals af­ter the out­break of fight­ing. The hos­pi­tals, where the chil­dren re­ceived ad­vanced treat­ment, had to shut down be­cause of lack of pow­er or near­by shelling, said He­ba Ab­dal­la, who joined the or­phan­age as a child and is now a nurse there.

Spokes­peo­ple for the mil­i­tary, the RSF, the health min­istry and the so­cial de­vel­op­ment min­istry, which over­sees the or­phan­age, didn’t an­swer re­quests for com­ment about the or­phan­age.

The sit­u­a­tion was par­tic­u­lar­ly har­row­ing in the first three weeks of the con­flict when fight­ing was heav­i­est. At one point dur­ing this time, the chil­dren were moved to the first floor away from win­dows ,to avoid be­ing hit by ran­dom fire or shrap­nel, said an­oth­er nurse, known as Sis­ter Tere­sa.

“It looked like a prison ... all of us were like pris­on­ers un­able to even look from the win­dow. We were all trapped,” she said.

Dur­ing this pe­ri­od, food, med­i­cine, ba­by for­mu­la and oth­er sup­plies dwin­dled be­cause care­tak­ers were un­able to get out and seek help, Ab­dal­la said.

“On many days, we couldn’t find any­thing for feed them,” Ab­dal­la said.

“They (the chil­dren) were cry­ing all the time be­cause they were hun­gry.”

As the fa­cil­i­ty be­came in­ac­ces­si­ble, the num­ber of nurs­es, nan­nies and oth­er care­tak­ers dropped. Many of the care­tak­ers were refugees from Ethiopia, Er­itrea or South Su­dan who fled the fight­ing like hun­dreds of thou­sands of oth­ers, said Ab­dal­la.

“We end­ed up have one nan­ny or two serv­ing 20 chil­dren or more, in­clud­ing dis­abled chil­dren,” said Moustafa, the vol­un­teer.

Chil­dren start­ed to die. At first, there were be­tween three to six deaths per week, then the toll in­creased rapid­ly, nurs­es said, The peak came Fri­day, with 14 deaths, fol­lowed by 12 on Sat­ur­day.

The AP ob­tained 11 death cer­tifi­cates for chil­dren at the or­phan­age, in­clud­ing eight dat­ed Sun­day and three dat­ed Sat­ur­day. All cer­tifi­cates list­ed cir­cu­la­to­ry col­lapse as a cause of death, but al­so men­tioned oth­er con­tribut­ing fac­tors such as fever, de­hy­dra­tion, mal­nu­tri­tion, and fail­ure to thrive.

Even be­fore the out­break of fight­ing, the or­phan­age lacked prop­er in­fra­struc­ture and equip­ment, said Moustafa. Twen­ty to 25 chil­dren were crammed in­to each room, many sleep­ing on the ground. Ba­bies dou­bled up in pink met­al cribs.

The or­phan­age was es­tab­lished in 1961. Though it gets funds from the gov­ern­ment, it de­pends heav­i­ly on do­na­tions and as­sis­tance from lo­cal and in­ter­na­tion­al char­i­ties.

The or­phan­age made head­lines in the past, most re­cent­ly in Feb­ru­ary 2022 when at least 54 chil­dren were re­port­ed dead in less than three months. At the time, ac­tivists launched an on­line ap­peal for help, and the mil­i­tary sent food aid and oth­er as­sis­tance.

The gov­ern­ment-run fa­cil­i­ty is in a three-sto­ry build­ing with a play­ground in the Daym area in cen­tral Khar­toum. The area has ex­pe­ri­enced some of the fiercest fight­ing, with stray shells and bul­lets hit­ting near­by homes and oth­er civil­ian in­fra­struc­ture, ac­cord­ing to work­ers and a free­lance pho­tog­ra­ph­er work­ing with the AP who lives close to the or­phan­age.

The news of the deaths caused pub­lic out­cry, with ac­tivists ap­peal­ing for help for the chil­dren.

Naz­im Sir­ag, an ac­tivist who heads the lo­cal char­i­ty Hadhreen, has led ef­forts to pro­vide vol­un­teers and sup­plies to the or­phan­age.

Start­ing Sun­day, food, med­i­cine and ba­by for­mu­la reached the fa­cil­i­ty, he said. The char­i­ty al­so re­paired the equip­ment, elec­tric­i­ty lines and a back­up gen­er­a­tor.

Sir­ag said the sit­u­a­tion re­mains dif­fi­cult, and or­phan­age work­ers called for the chil­dren to be moved out of Khar­toum. Oth­er­wise, said, Ab­dal­la, “you don’t know what will hap­pen to­mor­row.”

CAIRO (AP) —

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