海角大神

After 3 years of war, Sudanese civilians pay the price

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Guy Peterson/Special to 海角大神
A soldier with the Rapid Support Forces stands at the edge of a wedding celebration at a displacement camp in Tongoli, in Sudan's Nuba Mountains, Feb. 13, 2026.

Young soldiers, wearing uniforms the same color as the sandy ground, play card games in a market stall to fill time between firefights. Less than a mile away, in a displacement camp clinging to the edge of town, people build shelters from dried grass to keep the blazing heat at bay. After dark, gunfire echoes off the surrounding hills.

Tongoli is located in the Nuba Mountains of South Kordofan, in central Sudan, which is now the front line of the devastating civil war that began three years ago, April 15, 2023. With Sudan now roughly divided between a paramilitary-controlled west and a government-controlled east, this is 鈥渢he last remaining contested region,鈥 explains Maram Mahdi, a peace and governance researcher at the Institute for Security Studies, a think tank based in South Africa.

War without ideology

Why We Wrote This

After three years of fighting, there is no end in sight for Sudan鈥檚 brutal civil war. Its civilians are paying an unfathomable price.

When Sudan鈥檚 civil war began three years ago, the fight was for control of the military. On one side was the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and on the other, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a paramilitary militia that the army once deployed to quash uprisings against it.

Guy Peterson/Special to 海角大神
A man walks through Tongoli, a small market town on the northern edge of the Nuba Mountains, Feb. 12, 2026.

As the conflict spread, however, the two sides 鈥 both repeatedly and credibly accused of war crimes 鈥 have reframed themselves as champions of justice. The SAF says it is defending Sudan against whose crimes are 鈥渦nprecedented in the history of mankind.鈥 Meanwhile, the RSF claims to fight for a built on the principles of 鈥渇reedom, justice, and equality.鈥

Walideen Adow Ahmed, a teenage RSF soldier recovering from an injury at a hospital in the Nuba Mountains, says he joined the fight because he feels 鈥渕arginalized鈥 by leaders in Khartoum, who he says are getting wealthy while ordinary people lack basic services such as schools and hospitals. (As a condition of entering the Nuba Mountains, the Monitor鈥檚 reporter and photographer agreed to be accompanied by a representative of the local government, which is allied with the paramilitary side of the conflict.)

However, at its core, the war 鈥渋s really about existentialism,鈥 Ms. Mahdi says. The two sides both 鈥渒now that if they hand over power ... they cease to exist.鈥

The conflict鈥檚 lack of a strong ideological bent has created many strange bedfellows. The Nuba Mountains, for instance, have long been ruled semiautonomously by a rebel group called the Sudan People鈥檚 Liberation Movement-North. The SPLM-N runs a secular, democratic state-within-a-state in its territory, complete with courts and classrooms.

Guy Peterson/Special to 海角大神
People gather at a weekly market in Gidel, in Sudan's Nuba Mountains, Feb. 14, 2026.

In the decade before the current war, the Sudanese military repeatedly sent the RSF to violently suppress the SPLM-N鈥檚 rebellion. Even after the RSF split from the army in 2023, its fighters continued an ethnically targeted campaign of in the Nuba Mountains.

All this history made it particularly striking when, in February 2025, the SPLM-N announced that it had entered an alliance with the RSF.

For the RSF, the value of the partnership is clear. The militia now has access to the relative safety of the Nuba Mountains鈥 rugged, rocky terrain, which they are using as a staging ground for attempted advances on the capital, Khartoum.

But taking up arms for its longtime enemy is also strategic for the SPLM-N, explains Alex de Waal, an analyst on Sudan and executive director of the World Peace Foundation at the Fletcher School at Tufts University. The war was quickly advancing into the rebels鈥 territory, and if they allied with the SAF, which serves as the country鈥檚 de facto government, 鈥渢hey would be a very minor player,鈥 he says. 鈥淲ith the RSF, they have a lot more leverage.鈥

Civilians pay the price

Whatever the ultimate aims of the war鈥檚 combatants, however, civilians on all sides are paying a catastrophic price. Two out of five Sudanese 鈥 some 21 million people 鈥 , and nearly 14 million people have fled their homes. In all, close to 34 million of Sudan鈥檚 52 million are expected to need some form of humanitarian aid this year.

Guy Peterson/Special to 海角大神
Nasrin Jamil Ali fled heavy fighting in Kadugli, capital of Sudan's South Kordofan state. Sudan's civil war has displaced about 14 million people, Feb. 19, 2026.

Since the beginning of the year, drone and other airstrikes 鈥 carried out by RSF and the SAF alike 鈥 have struck homes, hospitals, markets, and aid convoys in the central Sudanese states of North, South, and West Kordofan, killing . In the Nuba Mountains, seven people died and dozens were injured in late March when an airstrike hit .

In the displacement camp on the edge of Tongoli, a woman who goes by Oum al Hussein was caring for her baby, Dawa. The child鈥檚 pale skin was pulled tight around her eyes, and her ribs protruded from her chest. Mother and daughter arrived here 15 days earlier, the third time they have been forced to relocate since the war began.

Like so many families in Sudan, theirs has known devastating loss as a result of the conflict. In April last year, while the family was living in a town about 70 miles from here, Oum al Hussein鈥檚 husband, Jabal al Dar, was killed by a drone attack while driving his tractor.

Oum al Hussein聽says her husband was a devout Muslim and devoted family man. Without him, she is raising Dawa on her own. 鈥淚 am worried for my baby. I want her to live and be healthy,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e are tired of this war.鈥

In a nearby hospital, Mr. Ahmed, the teenage soldier, lies recovering from a bullet wound he sustained in November. Although he joined the RSF to fight for his freedom, he explains that he no longer thinks he will survive 鈥渢o see Sudan after this war.鈥 Asked if the fight is worth his life, Mr. Ahmed looks exhausted. He doesn鈥檛 want to say.

Reporting for this story was supported by the Pulitzer Center.

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