Sudan: Pregnant Women’s Fate in Darfur

Darfur, Sudan: With only a few health facilities still functioning in Darfur, pregnant women face harrowing journeys to seek care. Insecurity, checkpoints, and unaffordable or unavailable transportation force them to undertake day-long treks by foot or donkey, often resulting in delivery complications, miscarriage or death.

Médecins Sans Frontières operates in ten out of Sudan’s 18 states and has been witnessing the grave toll that the war has taken on women and their health in Darfur and across the country.

In West and Central Darfur, many women who live in remote areas from urban centres give birth at home, relying on traditional methods. The scarcity of health care facilities, the distance they have to travel, the insecurity on the road and the price of transportation, often result in women seeking healthcare only after they face complications, putting both their lives and the lives of their newborns at great risk. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), more than 70% of health facilities in conflict-affected areas like Darfur are barely operational or completely closed, leaving millions without access to critical care amid one of the worst humanitarian crises in recent history.

One mother gave birth at home, the family had to carry her and after one day of walking, when they reached, she had already passed away because of the bleeding.
Wendemagegn Tefera Benty
Project Medical Referent (PMR) at Zalingei Hospital

The ongoing war in Sudan has a profound impact on the health of pregnant women and their babies, particularly in terms of preterm deliveries. It left people unemployed and disrupted access to food and clean water. As a result, many pregnant women arrive at hospitals malnourished, which directly affects the health of their babies, often leading to preterm birth and malnourishment. After these babies are born, they are frequently admitted to observation units to ensure their survival and well-being.

Osanatu Sento Bangura, MSF Midwife activity manager, checks on a newborn baby minutes after the birth in the delivery room. Murnei hospital, West Darfur, Sudan. January 2025. ©Belen Filgueira/MSF

“The biggest difficulty is how to manage to bring food to my children. I was working a lot when I was pregnant and that is maybe why my baby was born weak. Access to healthcare was also difficult but MSF helped,” said a 35-year-old maternity patient at Murnei hospital, in West Darfur.

The MSF-supported Zalingei hospital is the only referral hospital available for secondary healthcare activities for an estimated 500,000 people. There is no other health facility managing deliveries in the area. In the operation theatre at Zalingei, MSF teams perform over 40 emergency caesarean section operations per month.

Thirty-five-year-old Afaf Omar Yahya experienced severe abdominal pain in her home as her pregnancy was about to come to term. Due to the lack of transportation in Darfur, she had no choice but to travel for hours on a donkey to reach Zalingei hospital. Upon her arrival, the doctor informed her she had suffered a miscarriage, and she needed to undergo an emergency caesarean section. “Losing the baby was the greatest heartbreak for me.” Afaf said while recovering at the maternity ward.

Women from across Darfur share similar experiences but the situation shows no signs of improvement.
Most of the complications we receive are caused by post-home delivery and anemia during pregnancy.
Virginie Mukamiz
Midwife Activity Manager at Zalingei hospital

Pregnant women seek medical care when they have post-partum bleeding or sepsis. “Most health facilities in Darfur are now mere empty buildings. There’s no staff, no medications, nothing at all. Before the war, people had access at least to primary health care centres near their homes. Now they have to rely on big hospitals that are far away”, Osanatu Sento Bangura, MSF Midwife Activity Manager at MSF-supported Murnei hospital in West Darfur. Many of these situations could be prevented with antenatal consultations and adequate referral systems from primary care facilities, but most of them have been either out of service since the onset of the war or rely on humanitarian aid, which is widely unavailable, to deliver services.

Fatna Abdllah, 20 years old, rests in the intensive care unit with her 1-month-old baby, in Murnei Hospital, West Darfur, Sudan. January 2025. ©Belen Filgueira/MSF

After 12 days from giving birth at home, Sameera visited the Romalia mobile clinic, in a remote area of West Darfur, to have both her baby and herself checked. Upon arrival, she was running a high fever and had infected wounds in her arm. Following the home delivery, she had experienced terrible abdominal pain. Her brother gave her an injection to bring down her temperature but injured her arm. She was in pain and couldn’t hold her baby properly. After conducting several tests, MSF teams at the clinic discovered the infection in her arm. They promptly disinfected and dressed the wound and prescribed a treatment.

The war’s far-reaching effects threaten to trap women and girls in a never-ending cycle of malnutrition, declining health, and maternal death.

MSF reiterates our call to drastically scale-up the provision of life saving humanitarian aid and access to healthcare in Darfur. Warring parties must grant unhindered access for aid delivery and ease the obstacles that are preventing the civilian population of reaching healthcare. The full engagement of donors must be ensured to increase a sustained funding to boost the humanitarian response.





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