Dubai Telegraph - On Khartoum front line, Sudan women medics risk all for patients

EUR -
AED 4.306153
AFN 75.0429
ALL 95.503739
AMD 434.75432
ANG 2.098709
AOA 1076.390828
ARS 1633.24778
AUD 1.628526
AWG 2.110569
AZN 1.997971
BAM 1.957785
BBD 2.362126
BDT 143.899979
BGN 1.955914
BHD 0.44281
BIF 3489.474751
BMD 1.172539
BND 1.496038
BOB 8.103802
BRL 5.808644
BSD 1.172804
BTN 111.252582
BWP 15.938311
BYN 3.309523
BYR 22981.755751
BZD 2.358712
CAD 1.59436
CDF 2720.28988
CHF 0.91605
CLF 0.026783
CLP 1054.112588
CNY 8.006387
CNH 8.009617
COP 4288.442525
CRC 533.195048
CUC 1.172539
CUP 31.072272
CVE 110.746729
CZK 24.373212
DJF 208.384014
DKK 7.475055
DOP 69.770598
DZD 155.365983
EGP 62.894658
ERN 17.588078
ETB 184.088973
FJD 2.570327
FKP 0.860939
GBP 0.862002
GEL 3.142861
GGP 0.860939
GHS 13.136953
GIP 0.860939
GMD 85.595732
GNF 10289.026269
GTQ 8.959961
GYD 245.356495
HKD 9.186899
HNL 31.213432
HRK 7.537125
HTG 153.631453
HUF 363.42071
IDR 20325.193765
ILS 3.451755
IMP 0.860939
INR 111.286226
IQD 1536.025512
IRR 1540715.666567
ISK 143.847483
JEP 0.860939
JMD 183.766277
JOD 0.831376
JPY 184.174195
KES 151.433806
KGS 102.503912
KHR 4704.815418
KMF 492.466605
KPW 1055.342165
KRW 1725.179882
KWD 0.36031
KYD 0.977362
KZT 543.223189
LAK 25772.39793
LBP 105000.828342
LKR 374.82671
LRD 215.600573
LSL 19.53494
LTL 3.462202
LVL 0.709257
LYD 7.446066
MAD 10.847448
MDL 20.206948
MGA 4866.035425
MKD 61.633886
MMK 2461.86164
MNT 4196.707877
MOP 9.463379
MRU 46.86681
MUR 55.144932
MVR 18.121629
MWK 2041.980281
MXN 20.469245
MYR 4.655421
MZN 74.929587
NAD 19.534934
NGN 1613.390048
NIO 43.044332
NOK 10.900392
NPR 177.995572
NZD 1.986849
OMR 0.451129
PAB 1.172774
PEN 4.112684
PGK 5.087352
PHP 71.847345
PKR 326.874482
PLN 4.245704
PYG 7213.019006
QAR 4.272149
RON 5.203848
RSD 117.378833
RUB 87.908248
RWF 1713.665104
SAR 4.396996
SBD 9.429684
SCR 16.118093
SDG 704.113715
SEK 10.803423
SGD 1.492177
SHP 0.875418
SLE 28.848748
SLL 24587.542811
SOS 669.519913
SRD 43.920994
STD 24269.180819
STN 24.869543
SVC 10.262409
SYP 129.594933
SZL 19.534925
THB 38.122791
TJS 11.000548
TMT 4.109748
TND 3.378963
TOP 2.823192
TRY 52.931326
TTD 7.960816
TWD 37.086813
TZS 3054.463338
UAH 51.532291
UGX 4409.902668
USD 1.172539
UYU 46.771998
UZS 14011.836168
VES 573.304233
VND 30903.426254
VUV 139.40416
WST 3.183663
XAF 656.670246
XAG 0.01556
XAU 0.000254
XCD 3.168845
XCG 2.113677
XDR 0.815653
XOF 656.621982
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.771908
ZAR 19.540971
ZMK 10554.258277
ZMW 21.901789
ZWL 377.556938
  • RBGPF

    0.5000

    63.1

    +0.79%

  • GSK

    -0.7000

    51.61

    -1.36%

  • CMSD

    0.1500

    23.28

    +0.64%

  • RIO

    0.1000

    100.58

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    0.1800

    23.96

    +0.75%

  • RELX

    -0.2400

    36.35

    -0.66%

  • AZN

    -2.6300

    184.74

    -1.42%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    22.88

    +0.26%

  • RYCEF

    0.5500

    16.35

    +3.36%

  • BCC

    -1.1400

    78.13

    -1.46%

  • BTI

    -0.0900

    58.71

    -0.15%

  • NGG

    -1.0600

    88.48

    -1.2%

  • BP

    -0.9700

    46.41

    -2.09%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    12.98

    -0.08%

  • VOD

    0.3500

    16.15

    +2.17%

On Khartoum front line, Sudan women medics risk all for patients
On Khartoum front line, Sudan women medics risk all for patients / Photo: Ebrahim Hamid - AFP

On Khartoum front line, Sudan women medics risk all for patients

When fighting first gripped the Sudanese capital in April 2023, quickly overwhelming Khartoum's hospitals, Dr. Safaa Ali faced an impossible choice: her family or her patients.

Text size:

She said she stayed up all night before deciding not to follow her husband to Egypt with her four children.

"I was torn. I could either be with my children, or I could stay and do my duty," she told AFP.

She has not seen her family since.

Nearly two years into the war between the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, she is one of the last remaining obstetricians in the capital, risking her life to give Sudanese women a shot at safe births.

"We find strength in our love of our country, our passion for our work and the oath we swore," she said in a war-damaged delivery room.

She is one of a cohort of doctors, nurses, technicians and janitorial staff that AFP met in the last hospitals standing in Omdurman, Khartoum's sister city just across the Nile.

Their operating theatres were turned into battlegrounds, their hospitals bombed and their colleagues killed where they stood.

Yet through bombs and bullets, they turned up for their patients every day.

Bothaina Abdelrahman has been a janitor at Omdurman's Al-Nao hospital for 27 years.

She sheltered with her family in a neighbouring district for the first 48 hours of the war, but has not missed a day of work since.

"I would walk two hours to the hospital, and walk two hours back," she told AFP at the hospital, mop in hand.

For months, medical personnel have been subjected to routine accusations from combatants that they have been collaborating with the enemy or failing to treat their comrades.

"Health professionals were attacked, kidnapped, killed and taken hostage for ransom," said Dr. Khalid Abdelsalam, Khartoum project coordinator for medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF).

Nationwide, up to 90 percent of hospitals in conflict zones have been forced shut, according to Sudan's doctors' union, which says at least 78 health workers have been killed since the war began.

By October, the World Health Organization had recorded 119 attacks on health facilities.

"At one point, there wasn't a single working MRI machine in the country" for medical scans, Abdelsalam told AFP.

- Hospitals bombed -

Khansa al-Moatasem heads the 180-person nursing team at Al-Nao, Omdurman's only hospital to remain functioning throughout the war, despite repeated attacks.

"It's an honour to give the hospital everything I have and everything I've learnt," she told AFP, pink headscarf glowing under the fluorescent lights.

According to MSF, which supports the complex of two-storey buildings, Al-Nao has suffered three direct hits since the war began.

At the hospital gates, a sign reads: "No weapons allowed," but it frequently goes unheeded.

After the RSF stormed the nearby Saudi maternity hospital early in the war, Dr. Ali, who serves as the hospital's director, steeled her nerves and went to the paramilitaries herself.

"I met their field commander and I told him this was a women's hospital, only for them to storm it again the next day with even more fighters," she recalled.

In July 2023, she watched one of her colleagues die when the hospital was bombed.

Eventually the hospital was forced to close its doors after its ceilings collapsed, its equipment was looted and the walls of its delivery rooms were left riddled with bullets.

Dr. Ali set up mobile clinics and a temporary maternity ward at Al-Nao, until the Saudi hospital partially reopened this month.

- 'Highlight of my career' -

Since army forces recaptured much of Omdurman in early 2024, a semblance of normality has slowly returned, but hospitals have continued to come under attack.

As recently as February, Al-Nao was rocked by RSF shelling as its exhausted doctors raced to treat dozens of casualties from RSF artillery fire on a crowded market.

Those hospitals which still function have been forced to rely increasingly on the help of volunteers from the local Emergency Response Rooms.

The neighbourhood groups are part of a grassroots aid network delivering frontline aid across Sudan, but are mainly comprised of young Sudanese with few resources.

With no senior physicians left, Dr. Fathia Abdelmajed, a paediatrician for 40 years, has become the "mother" of Al-Buluk hospital.

For years, she treated patients at home in the Bant neighbourhood of Omdurman.

But since November 2023, she has been training teams at the small, overwhelmed hospital, "where hardworking young people were struggling since the start of the war," Abdelmajed told AFP.

She said the work was often harrowing but the honour of serving alongside such dedicated volunteers "has made this the highlight of my career".

G.Gopalakrishnan--DT