13 June, 2024 – Since May 10, El Fasher has seen intense fighting between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and Joint Forces and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF). As the conflict continues to ravage El Fasher, the city’s hospitals are damaged and shut down. Meanwhile, thousands of people are fleeing in search of safety, with many arriving at Zamzam camp, where there is already an acute malnutrition crisis. MSF teams are adapting their response to maintain provision of medical assistance as needs escalate and access to care diminishes.
Of the three main hospitals in El Fasher, only Saudi Hospital remains operational today. The Babiker Nahar paediatric hospital was damaged on May 11, when an airstrike carried out by the SAF landed 50 metres away. Since May 24, South Hospital was hit by mortars and bullets multiple times, killing two people and wounding fourteen, and leading MSF and the Ministry of Health to evacuate patients. On June 8, the South Hospital was completely shut down after being stormed and looted by the RSF who fired shots inside the facility.
“Fortunately, most patients had already been evacuated from South Hospital before the RSF raid, and the remaining patients and staff were able to escape,” says Michel-Olivier Lacharité, MSF Head of Emergencies in Sudan.
MSF is supporting Saudi Hospital, where wounded are now arriving. Originally a maternity hospital, the facility needs to be adapted to be able to manage wounded and mass casualties while continuing to provide care for women and newborns. For several days, the Saudi Hospital lacked sufficient electricity to perform surgeries, but MSF teams helped to restore the energy supply. MSF is also helping to organise the emergency room and is evaluating needs for medical supplies and materials. From May 10 to June 11, a total of 1,418 wounded have arrived at South Hospital and subsequently at Saudi Hospital, with 226 people passing away.
MSF is relocating its maternal and newborn care services from South Hospital to the MSF field hospital in Zamzam camp, 15 km outside the city. Even before the closure of South Hospital, fewer and fewer women were able to come to the hospital due to heavy fighting in the area.
People are also fleeing different parts of the city in search of safety, and MSF teams have seen people arriving in Zamzam and beyond, to areas such as Sortoni and Rokero in Jebel Marra.
In Zamzam camp for displaced people, where an estimated 300,000 already resided, MSF has been responding to a catastrophic malnutrition crisis, providing care through two clinics and a field hospital. Nutritional surveys carried out in January, and again in March and April, revealed malnutrition rates were double the emergency threshold amongst children, with similar findings among pregnant and breastfeeding women, signaling a massive, life-threatening crisis in Zamzam camp.
“In the current chaos created by the conflict, we are not able to re-evaluate the nutritional rates in the camp, assess new needs, or determine the number of new people arriving,” says Michel-Olivier Lacharité. “The conflict has impacted our teams; some have evacuated and are working remotely, while many of those remaining have also been displaced. They are doing everything they can to keep activities running and open the new maternity while ensuring their own safety and needs. This situation makes it very difficult to obtain updated information, but given the prior malnutrition rates, the increased displacement of people, and the new difficulties created by heavy fighting in accessing food due to security concerns and market disruptions, the situation is likely to be alarming. A massive scaled-up response is surely needed.