Sudan is Dying, and We’re Just Watching
Let’s be honest. While everyone is watching Gaza and Ukraine, a huge nightmare is happening right now in Africa. It’s January 2026, and the war in Sudan has lasted over a thousand days. Think about that. A thousand days. It is way past just being a political fight. The whole country is collapsing. It started in April 2023 as a fight between two generals. Now, it is like the country is killing itself. It is tearing the people apart. This is the death of a nation, caused by two greedy leaders and foreign countries who want to take what they can.
In the middle of this mess are two men who used to be friends: General Burhan of the army and "Hemedti," the leader of a large militia. They used to work together to stop democracy. Now, they are fighting to the death to be the boss. The sad truth? Neither one can win. They are just breaking the country in half. The army is hiding in the east, and the militia is running the west. It looks like a broken land where warlords rule little areas and the "government" is a joke.
The scariest part is when they are fighting. They aren't on a battlefield far away. They are fighting in people’s homes, hospitals, and markets. Experts call what happened to the capital city "urbicide." That simply means "killing a city." It used to be a place full of life and history. Now, the schools, libraries, and banks are just empty ruins. It gets worse. In the Darfur region, they are hunting down people because of their race. The militia is attacking non-Arab groups, just like in the bad days of the early 2000s. 14 million people have lost their homes. Famine is here. People aren't just dying from bullets—they are being wiped out by hunger.
If you look at this, it makes you angry because outsiders are making it worse. Sudan has become a playground for other countries' wars. The neighbors don't see a country hurting; they see free stuff. You hear reports of the UAE helping the militia (probably for the gold), while Egypt and Iran help the army to keep control of the sea. It shows a hard lesson: being a free country doesn't mean much when you are weak. As soon as Sudan broke open, other countries swooped in to grab what they could.
The war in Sudan shows how fast a country can fall apart. It’s not just politics; it’s the end of a people. Unless the world stops just "watching" and starts punishing the outsiders who are adding fuel to the fire, Sudan is going to become a black hole on the map. A place with only violence. For anyone studying how societies work, Sudan is a warning: a country is fragile. Once you break the trust between people, fixing it is really, really hard.
