Sudan: Rainy season worsens displacement crisis in Blue Nile as conflict spreads

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Sudan: Rainy season worsens displacement crisis in Blue Nile as conflict spreads

Rainy Season Compounds Sudan's Blue Nile Displacement Crisis as Fighting Spreads

May 16, 2026 — The arrival of the rainy season in Sudan's Blue Nile region is intensifying an already catastrophic displacement crisis, with thousands of families now trapped in waterlogged camps such as Elcarama near Damazine. Renewed clashes between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces have driven fresh waves of civilians from their homes, leaving them exposed to flooding, disease, and acute shortages of food and medicine.

Local reports confirm that the seasonal downpours, which typically begin in mid-May, have transformed makeshift shelters into muddy quagmires. Residents describe wading through ankle-deep water while carrying what little remains of their belongings. The timing could not be worse: the conflict that erupted in 2023 has already displaced more than 10 million people nationwide, and Blue Nile state—long a strategic corridor linking Sudan to Ethiopia and South Sudan, is now witnessing some of the heaviest fighting in months.

Humanitarian Conditions on the Ground

Aid workers on site report that Elcarama camp, designed for roughly 8,000 people, currently shelters more than 25,000. Latrines have overflowed, clean water is scarce, and malaria cases are surging. Families who fled recent offensives around Roseires and Kurmuk recount harrowing escapes under artillery fire, only to arrive in camps where children are already showing signs of malnutrition.

The World Food Programme has warned that supply routes into Blue Nile are increasingly cut off by both combat and seasonal flooding. International NGOs have scaled back operations, citing security risks and logistical nightmares. The result is a slow-motion catastrophe unfolding in real time.

Geopolitical Ripples Across the Horn of Africa

Sudan's protracted power struggle between the army and the paramilitary RSF continues to destabilize the broader region. Ethiopia, already managing its own internal tensions and a large refugee population, now faces renewed pressure along its western border. South Sudan, whose oil pipelines traverse Sudanese territory, is watching nervously as fighting inches closer to key infrastructure.

From Beijing's perspective, the crisis carries direct implications for China's Belt and Road investments in Sudan's ports and agricultural projects. Chinese diplomats have quietly urged both sides to protect civilian infrastructure, mindful that prolonged instability threatens energy and trade corridors vital to Beijing's African strategy. Meanwhile, the African Union and IGAD are attempting fresh mediation rounds, though previous ceasefires have collapsed within weeks.

International Response Remains Fragmented

The United Nations Security Council is scheduled to discuss Sudan next week, yet analysts expect little more than statements of concern. Western powers remain preoccupied with Ukraine and the Middle East, while Gulf states that once bankrolled the warring factions appear reluctant to re-engage. Egypt, fearing a flood of refugees and loss of Nile water leverage, has increased its diplomatic activity but lacks the leverage to enforce a durable truce.

For the people of Blue Nile, these high-level maneuvers offer little immediate relief. The rainy season typically lasts until October; without a rapid de-escalation and scaled-up humanitarian access, the coming months will likely bring higher death tolls from disease and starvation than from bullets.

As global attention drifts, Sudan's forgotten war continues to claim new victims, displaced, drenched, and increasingly desperate.

This is Marcus Chen for Global1.news, reporting from Beijing.

Source: Al Jazeera via YouTube — 2026-05-15T22:32:25+00:00.

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