Care Amidst Crisis: HI Provids Emergency Rehabilitation in Sudan
Your generosity will directly help people with disabilities, including survivors of disaster and conflict around the world who are too often forgotten.
Since April 2023, Sudan has been torn apart by a war between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF). With forced displacements, alarming food insecurity, and atrocities against civilians, the humanitarian situation in Sudan is one of the most catastrophic in the world. Critical services such as rehabilitation, psychosocial support, and protection have virtually collapsed, while needs have risen exponentially. HI is one of the few humanitarian organizations providing rehabilitation care in the country.
Three years after the outbreak of war, extreme violence continues
At the start of the conflict, it was impossible to deliver direct humanitarian aid in Sudan. Today, however, Humanity & Inclusion is present in the country with a team of around 60 staff members. In Al Jazirah state, southeast of the capital Khartoum, HI provides rehabilitation care for people with disabilities and those injured, as well as stimulation therapy for children experiencing malnutrition, in four hospitals and rehabilitation centers.
In Darfur, the HI provides financial support and distributes hygiene kits to displaced people in Geneina. In addition, HI offers emergency rehabilitation care in the hospital of ‘Doctors Without Borders’ in Tawilah, a town west of the city El-Fasher, where heavy clashes between the warring parties took place in 2025, exposing the population to extreme violence and mass killings.
“The fall of El Fasher led to an influx of new displaced people in neighboring Tawilah. An increasing number of people with severe injuries and amputations urgently need physical rehabilitation care and adapted assistive devices.” – Vincent Dalonneau, Country Director for HI Sudan
Prevention of secondary complications
In Darfur, support is primarily provided to people who have been injured. Gunshot wounds are among the most common injuries, but the harsh conditions faced by those fleeing violence and living in displacement camps also lead to fractures, burns, and other forms of trauma. Early rehabilitation care is essential to prevent patients from developing permanent disabilities or chronic pain.
“We provide emergency rehabilitation with a strong focus on functional recovery. The objective is not to achieve perfect movement, but to restore the highest possible level of autonomy within the patient’s living environment and to prevent secondary complications.” – Marie Remy, Rehabilitation Team Leader
In partnership with local carpenters, wooden assistive devices such as crutches are produced to help patients regain mobility. At a later stage, metalworkers will also be involved in manufacturing mobility aids such as tricycles.
Returnees at risk
The war in Sudan has triggered the world’s largest displacement crisis, with nearly 14 million people displaced at its peak. Despite the ongoing conflict, more than 3 million people had already returned home by the end of January 2026, including 700,000 from abroad, according to UNHCR and IOM. Most returns occurred to the capital Khartoum and states in the east where violence had largely subsided.
However, the presence of explosive remnants of war poses a significant threat to these returnees. According to UNMAS, homes, schools, hospitals, mosques, and roads are contaminated with unexploded ordnance. Reports also indicate the use of anti-personnel mines.
“Other conflicts around the world have already shown how the contamination by unexploded ordnance can impact civilian life for decades, even after the conflict has ended. It endangers the lives of the Sudanese population, restricts access to essential services, and will hinder economic development.” – Vincent Dalonneau, Country Director for HI Sudan
HI is also exploring the possibility of launching demining activities in the near future and organizing awareness sessions to teach people how to identify hazardous objects and respond safely.
ABOUT US
Humanity & Inclusion U.S.
8757 Georgia Avenue
Suite 420
Silver Spring, MD 20910
MORE INFORMATION
Humanity & Inclusion is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization (EIN/tax ID number: 55-0914744). Contributions are fully tax-deductible to the extent allowable by law. CFC #51472
None of the funds donated through this website will benefit activities in the following countries: Cuba, Iran, North Korea, the Crimea Region, or Syria. Humanity & Inclusion does not have programs in all of these countries.