“In the UK, we really struggle because trying to get coverage on the media or political interest in Sudan has just been almost impossible. And yet the numbers are staggering,” Christine said.
She added, “You always feel really bad when you're working in development, that you don't want to create a hierarchy because every crisis is its own crisis and is absolutely a tragedy.”
Christine Allen. Credit: ACI Africa
The conflicts in the Middle East and the war between Russia and Ukraine have remained for a long time the focus of mainstream news media, Christine lamented, and added, “Situations in Sudan are horrendous—but Sudan has been lost.”
Poor media visibility of the situation in Sudan, the Executive Director of CAFOD said, “is an illustration of Africa not being seen, Africa not being recognized as needing our solidarity and our support.”
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Christine Allen. Credit: ACI Africa
“Sudan is the biggest humanitarian crisis that the world is ignoring,” she reiterated.
Christine went on to laud faith-based agencies including Caritas and civil society entities for remaining on the ground to provide humanitarian support in Sudan.
Christine Allen. Credit: ACI Africa
She lamented the lack of adequate funding, public interest, support, and political leadership, aspects she said are essential to addressing the effects of the civil war.
“The world needs to wake up and take recognition of what's going on in Sudan, especially because this is a regional conflict,” she warned, and added, “This has massive knock-on impacts right across Africa. And I think we ignore it at our peril.”
Christine Allen. Credit: ACI Africa
In the August 2 interview, Christine told ACI Africa that from Rwanda, she would be visiting South Sudan, where some of those fleeing the Sudan civil war have been received
“Sudan has a lot of borders. And right across the piece, it's being affected,” the Executive Director of CAFOD said, adding that countries like Kenya and Ethiopia “are taking in refugees, people who are in desperate situations and who are traumatized.”
Christine Allen. Credit: ACI Africa
She noted, “Nobody wants to flee ... People want to go home. They want to go back to the lives that they had before. But that is just not possible at the moment unless there's a strong, stable, and secure peace.”
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