Dubai Telegraph - 'War has taken everything': AFP reporter returns home to Khartoum

EUR -
AED 4.309445
AFN 77.526287
ALL 96.608144
AMD 447.374631
ANG 2.10092
AOA 1076.03909
ARS 1690.625162
AUD 1.765924
AWG 2.112182
AZN 1.996955
BAM 1.953942
BBD 2.359656
BDT 143.173869
BGN 1.953942
BHD 0.440281
BIF 3462.807524
BMD 1.173434
BND 1.513061
BOB 8.095303
BRL 6.359657
BSD 1.171586
BTN 105.950261
BWP 15.52324
BYN 3.453816
BYR 22999.311998
BZD 2.35626
CAD 1.615631
CDF 2628.492315
CHF 0.934505
CLF 0.027227
CLP 1068.11854
CNY 8.277989
CNH 8.2773
COP 4461.957521
CRC 586.042784
CUC 1.173434
CUP 31.096009
CVE 110.160258
CZK 24.270261
DJF 208.631631
DKK 7.469431
DOP 74.479184
DZD 151.466984
EGP 55.571966
ERN 17.601514
ETB 183.058746
FJD 2.66581
FKP 0.877152
GBP 0.878151
GEL 3.157157
GGP 0.877152
GHS 13.449212
GIP 0.877152
GMD 85.661103
GNF 10189.311889
GTQ 8.973468
GYD 245.10695
HKD 9.134945
HNL 30.844673
HRK 7.533212
HTG 153.56399
HUF 384.919306
IDR 19518.612548
ILS 3.781738
IMP 0.877152
INR 106.294956
IQD 1534.740751
IRR 49427.984373
ISK 148.323015
JEP 0.877152
JMD 187.581645
JOD 0.831948
JPY 182.987099
KES 151.076355
KGS 102.61686
KHR 4690.540182
KMF 492.180259
KPW 1056.08658
KRW 1730.70933
KWD 0.359892
KYD 0.976372
KZT 611.019036
LAK 25398.85049
LBP 104914.446177
LKR 362.015791
LRD 206.783388
LSL 19.766106
LTL 3.464846
LVL 0.709798
LYD 6.363949
MAD 10.778352
MDL 19.805169
MGA 5190.065228
MKD 61.491533
MMK 2464.003
MNT 4160.966054
MOP 9.394568
MRU 46.88642
MUR 53.88439
MVR 18.066702
MWK 2031.568362
MXN 21.132296
MYR 4.807913
MZN 74.994631
NAD 19.766106
NGN 1704.495728
NIO 43.119002
NOK 11.880441
NPR 169.520818
NZD 2.023359
OMR 0.449043
PAB 1.171586
PEN 3.94445
PGK 5.050198
PHP 69.3676
PKR 328.333517
PLN 4.223372
PYG 7869.517575
QAR 4.26984
RON 5.087892
RSD 117.2685
RUB 93.580543
RWF 1705.178697
SAR 4.402964
SBD 9.594881
SCR 17.633179
SDG 705.818659
SEK 10.878005
SGD 1.515954
SHP 0.88038
SLE 28.309124
SLL 24606.334552
SOS 668.364512
SRD 45.233557
STD 24287.720558
STN 24.476727
SVC 10.251253
SYP 12974.451022
SZL 19.759213
THB 37.074612
TJS 10.766763
TMT 4.118754
TND 3.424944
TOP 2.825349
TRY 50.102775
TTD 7.950441
TWD 36.769686
TZS 2899.642987
UAH 49.502233
UGX 4164.040784
USD 1.173434
UYU 45.976285
UZS 14114.5797
VES 313.822972
VND 30868.362317
VUV 141.61592
WST 3.256846
XAF 655.333901
XAG 0.018937
XAU 0.000273
XCD 3.171265
XCG 2.111492
XDR 0.815025
XOF 655.333901
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.827953
ZAR 19.806884
ZMK 10562.316454
ZMW 27.034295
ZWL 377.845361
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.17

    0%

  • BCC

    0.2500

    76.51

    +0.33%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    23.25

    -0.65%

  • NGG

    0.2400

    74.93

    +0.32%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    48.81

    -0.14%

  • RIO

    -1.0800

    75.66

    -1.43%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.3

    -0.56%

  • BP

    -0.2700

    35.26

    -0.77%

  • BCE

    0.3100

    23.71

    +1.31%

  • RELX

    0.1000

    40.38

    +0.25%

  • BTI

    -1.2700

    57.1

    -2.22%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.7

    -0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    12.59

    +0.4%

  • AZN

    -0.4600

    89.83

    -0.51%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2500

    14.6

    -1.71%

'War has taken everything': AFP reporter returns home to Khartoum
'War has taken everything': AFP reporter returns home to Khartoum / Photo: Ebrahim Hamid - AFP

'War has taken everything': AFP reporter returns home to Khartoum

It had been nearly two years since AFP journalist Abdelmoneim Abu Idris Ali set foot in his home in war-torn Khartoum, after the sound of children playing in the street gave way to the fearsome fire of machine guns.

Text size:

Sudan's once-peaceful capital awoke to the sound of bombs and gunfire on April 15, 2023 as war broke out between its two most powerful generals -- army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, who commands the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

Bombs tore through homes, fighters took over the streets and hundreds of thousands scrambled to escape -- among them Abdelmoneim, his wife, his son and three daughters.

Since then they have been displaced five times -- fleeing each time the front line closed in.

Eventually the 59-year-old journalist sent his family to safety in another African country while he settled down to work alone from Port Sudan on the Red Sea.

Then last month he was able to briefly return to his home in Khartoum North during a reporting trip escorted by the army after it recaptured the city.

He found his beloved neighbourhood, known as Bahri, abandoned.

"The whole place is cloaked in silence, no grocery store chit-chats, no boisterous games of football on the corner, nothing," he said.

- 'Like an earthquake' -

"The last time I was here, the neighbours were all in the street saying goodbye, praying for each other's safety, promising we would meet again soon."

Now their doors hung ajar, beds dragged out onto the street, apparently by RSF fighters who used them to sleep in the open air.

Since the war broke out, the paramilitaries have been notorious for taking over and looting homes, selling the contents or taking it for themselves.

When he got to his landing, Abdelmoneim braced himself for what he would find inside.

"It was like an earthquake had hit. The furniture was upside-down and thrown around, pieces shattered on the ground," he said.

He clambered slowly from room to room, taking in the damage.

The couch was pocked with burn marks where the fighters had put out cigarette after cigarette.

His daughters' closets were ripped open and emptied of every last dress.

And on the floor of his office, lying among the tattered remains of his library, was a photo of his wedding to his wife Nahla, with her image torn out.

"I don't get what they have against my books and my wedding photos," he said.

"I knew they had stolen furniture. I couldn't imagine they would destroy everything else."

- 'Wish my kids had never seen that' -

In March, the army recaptured Khartoum, to the joy of millions of displaced Sudanese anxious to return to their homes.

"But my girls say they never want to come back," Abdelmoneim said.

"How can they ever forget sleeping huddled together in the living room, terrified by the sound of every air strike?"

Abdelmoneim shudders at the thought of the horrors they have seen since.

"When we were leaving Khartoum, there were bodies lying in the street and an old man standing over them, trying to keep a plastic sheet in place.

"When I stopped to ask him if he was okay, he said, 'I'm trying to keep the dogs away.' I wish my kids had never heard that."

For seven months, Abdelmoneim tried to wait out the fighting in Wad Madani, just south of Khartoum, hoping against hope they could go home.

"The moment I realised this wouldn't end for years was when the war came to Wad Madani," he said.

Again they took everything they could carry, and again they joined a wave of hundreds of thousands of people running away, this time on foot, heading east.

The veteran journalist and his wife made the painful choice to separate the family -- she and the children would go to another country; and he would go to Port Sudan on the Red Sea, home to the United Nations, the army-aligned government and hundreds of thousands of displaced people.

- Destitution and displacement -

Abdelmoneim, like countless Sudanese caught in the war's crossfire, has lost family members, his life savings and any hope for the future.

"This war has taken everything from us," he said.

"And everything they haven't taken, they've destroyed."

For years he had been building up a tiny homestead on the outskirts of Khartoum, lined with fruit trees and a few simple crops he could tend when he retired. The RSF destroyed it in their rampage.

His family's home and land, in the agricultural state of Al-Jazira, were looted and cut off from power and water -- his relatives left starving and powerless to defend themselves against the RSF's predations.

Now both Al-Jazira and Khartoum are under army control but the war, and the suffering it has wrought, is far from over.

Tens of thousands have been killed and more than 12 million uprooted, including almost four million who fled to other countries.

Hundreds of thousands are returning to areas recaptured by the army, choosing destitution at home over displacement, but most of these areas still lack clean water, electricity and health care.

Famine still stalks Sudan, with around 638,000 people already in famine and eight million on the brink of mass starvation.

The country remains divided, and the RSF -- in control of nearly all of the western region of Darfur and, with its allies, parts of the south -- has not given up the fight.

In recent weeks, the paramilitaries have killed hundreds of people in famine-stricken displacement camps, while RSF chief Daglo has announced a rival administration to rule over the ashes.

For many like Abdelmoneim, even their modest dreams now seem impossible.

"If this war ends tomorrow, all I want is to be somewhere quiet and safe with my family, farming in peace."

H.El-Hassany--DT