Home News UNICEF: More than 300 children killed in Sudan in last six months
News

UNICEF: More than 300 children killed in Sudan in last six months

Share
Share

UNICEF has warned that the conflict in Sudan is exacting a devastating toll on children, revealing that more than 330 children were killed or injured during the first six months of 2026 alone. The UN children’s agency described the situation as a relentless cycle of violence, displacement, and deprivation, with drone strikes and escalating fighting increasingly placing children in the direct line of fire.

According to UNICEF, nearly 60 percent of the reported child casualties were linked to drone attacks, with the worst affected areas including North Kordofan, Darfur, and Blue Nile states. In North Kordofan alone, more than 35 child casualties have been reported since May, including children as young as two months old. The agency warned that the increasing use of explosive weapons in populated areas is exposing children to unprecedented levels of danger.

Beyond the loss of life, millions of children continue to endure severe humanitarian conditions as the conflict enters its fourth year. Many have been forced from their homes, deprived of education, separated from their families, and left without reliable access to food, clean water, healthcare, or protection. UNICEF says the ongoing violence has intensified fear and trauma among children, many of whom have spent years living amid conflict.

The agency has renewed its call on all parties to the conflict to uphold international humanitarian law by protecting civilians, particularly children, and safeguarding schools, hospitals, and other civilian infrastructure. UNICEF also urged the international community to increase humanitarian funding and improve access for aid workers so that life saving assistance can reach vulnerable families trapped in conflict affected areas.

Sudan’s conflict, which began in April 2023, has created one of the world’s largest humanitarian crises. Millions of people have been displaced, widespread famine has taken hold in several regions, and the United Nations continues to warn that without urgent international action, the humanitarian situation, especially for children, is likely to deteriorate even further.

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Don't Miss

Nearly 1.2 Million Undocumented Migrants Apply for Legal Status in Spain as Mass Regularisation Programme Closes

Almost 1.2 million undocumented foreigners applied for legal residency in Spain before a sweeping mass regularisation programme closed at the end of June,...

US Move to Block UN Funding for Somalia Threatens to Collapse African Union Peace Mission

The United States has told the African Union that it will block any spending of United Nations funds on the AU Support and...

Related Articles

Safaricom shareholders to vote on Vodafone’s right to pick CEO

Shareholders in Kenya’s biggest telecommunications company, Safaricom, will vote later this month...

Kenya ‘Birdman’ is internet hit but worries health officials

A Kenyan man who has become an internet sensation for living alongside...

Nigeria’s UTM secures gas supply deal, clears key hurdle to $3 billion LNG project

Nigerian energy company UTM Offshore has signed a long-term gas supply agreement...

Ghana rejects Ramaphosa visit over xenophobic attacks on Ghanaians

Ghana has rejected planned bilateral meetings with South Africa that were to...