'No one else will': Sudan's journalists risk all to report the war

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On a mountain near Sudan's border, journalists climb rugged slopes, phones held high, hoping to catch a faint signal from neighbouring Chad to send stories amid the war's two-year communications blackout. Journalists say efforts like these are their only way to tell the world about the horrors unfolding in Darfur, where accounts of sexual violence, ethnic massacres and mass displacement continue to emerge.Since fighting erupted between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in

On a mountain near Sudan's border, journalists climb rugged slopes, phones held high, hoping to catch a faint signal from neighbouring Chad to send stories amid the war's two-year communications blackout. Journalists say efforts like these are their only way to tell the world about the horrors unfolding in Darfur , where accounts of sexual violence, ethnic massacres and mass displacement continue to emerge. Since fighting erupted between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in April 2023, at least 28 reporters have been killed, according to Sudan 's journalist union.

Dozens more have been detained and tortured, while many have been displaced and cut off from electricity, water and internet. Noon, a 35-year-old freelance journalist who requested a pseudonym for her safety, said she was forced to flee the West Darfur capital of El-Geneina after reporting on ethnically motivated mass killings committed by the RSF and its allied militias in 2023. Her stories on the massacres, where UN experts say up to 15,000 mostly Massalit people were killed – leading to genocide accusations against the RSF – made her a target.



"They raided my family's house. They took all my equipment, my cameras, everything," she said. But even there, she was not safe.

Yet some remain on the ground, working in secret with nothing to their name. Read more on RFI English Read also: Sudan's booming wartime gold trade flows through the UAE EU and UK call to put an end to 'horrific' Sudan war at London conference NGOs call on Europe to act as Sudan war hits grim two-year mark.