www.thenewhumanitarian.org
Open in
urlscan Pro
172.67.22.111
Public Scan
Submitted URL: https://r.smartbrief.com/resp/sfASCTeVdBDCoSboCigydnCicNbKKh?format=multipart
Effective URL: https://www.thenewhumanitarian.org/news-feature/2024/06/24/we-survive-together-communal-kitchens-fighting-famine-khartoum-sudan
Submission: On July 13 via api from BE — Scanned from CA
Effective URL: https://www.thenewhumanitarian.org/news-feature/2024/06/24/we-survive-together-communal-kitchens-fighting-famine-khartoum-sudan
Submission: On July 13 via api from BE — Scanned from CA
Form analysis
0 forms found in the DOMText Content
Skip to main content Menu Search The New Humanitarian Search Journalism from the heart of crises * About us * Membership * Newsletters * Podcasts * Aid and Policy * Conflict * Environment and Disasters * Investigations * Migration 1. Home 2. East Africa 3. Sudan * Conflict * News feature * 24 June 2024 ‘WE SURVIVE TOGETHER’: THE COMMUNAL KITCHENS FIGHTING FAMINE IN KHARTOUM ‘Everybody should be able to eat and not feel shame.’ Rawh Nasir Freelance journalist and emergency response room volunteer Fazi Abubakr/TNH A man trapped by fighting in April 2023 walks towards his home in Khartoum. Residents of the devastated capital are experiencing deep hunger as war stretches into a second year. Rawh Nasir Freelance journalist and emergency response room volunteer * Share on X (formerly Twitter) * Share on Facebook * Share via WhatsApp * Share via email Republish this article KHARTOUM Communal kitchens are assisting hundreds of thousands of people in Sudan’s embattled capital, Khartoum, providing regular meals as well as social and emotional support amid a deepening famine that international aid groups are failing to tackle. Run by neighbourhood-based mutual aid groups called emergency response rooms, the kitchens are struggling with crippling funding gaps, security threats, and communications and electricity blackouts, volunteers told The New Humanitarian. The wide-ranging challenges mean many kitchens only offer one meal per day, while some emergency response rooms have cut back to a single meal per week, or have temporarily closed down even while their communities remain in desperate need. “The service which we gain from the kitchen is life-saving… but the food amount is not enough for everyone. Circumstances are very bad here,” said Nisreen*, a woman from Umbada locality in Omdurman, a major city that is part of the Greater Khartoum area. Nisreen said the Umbada kitchen is currently only able to offer one meal per week, usually beans or lentils. Still, people are dependent on that small amount, and a further reduction would be a “disaster”, she added. Sudan’s war began in April 2023 and pits the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) against the regular army. It has produced the world’s largest displacement crisis, uprooting nearly 10 million people, and the biggest hunger crisis too. One recent study predicted 2.5 million starvation deaths by September, while others are warning of the world's worst famine in 40 years. Some of the most extreme hunger levels are in Greater Khartoum, which includes the devastated capital and its adjoining sister cities – Bahri and Omdurman. Most of the area is controlled by RSF fighters, who invaded people’s homes at the start of the conflict and stripped them of their possessions. Most international aid groups evacuated Khartoum at the outset of the fighting and haven’t yet returned. Their efforts to bring in supplies have been scuppered by the army and aligned authorities, which seek to starve RSF-occupied territories of relief. While volunteers are leading an aid response, the number of people depending on them is growing as people’s coping mechanisms are eroded, and as thousands return to the capital, fleeing attacks and suffering in the places they had fled to. The local and diaspora funding that sustains the kitchens is reaching its limits, volunteers said. And support from international donors remains insufficient, despite more humanitarian agencies engaging with emergency response rooms. “The funding is nothing compared to what people need,” said Mawada, a kitchen volunteer from Umbada. She said her group is committed to helping its community despite the mounting challenges: “The two warring parties failed to help civilians, but we can do, and we will continue to.” SAVING LIVES AND DIGNITY: ‘EVERYBODY SHOULD BE ABLE TO EAT AND NOT FEEL SHAME’ Mutual aid groups established themselves across Sudan after the war erupted. They drew members from a vibrant pro-democracy movement, and brought ideas rooted in a rich heritage of social solidarity, best represented in the tradition of nafeer (“a call to mobilise”). The Greater Khartoum kitchens follow two different models. Under the takaya system, religious and community leaders feed people on the streets, in houses, or under trees; but there are also more structured kitchens run in defined spaces by the emergency response rooms. Hassan, who helps coordinate assistance across Greater Khartoum, said over 350 communal kitchens have been set up, assisting 500,000 families with at least one meal a day. “We aim to save people’s dignity,” he said. “Everybody should be able to eat and not feel shame. We, as Sudanese, are still helping each other. We survive together.” Volunteers said the kitchens run regular funding campaigns, using social media to request money from philanthropists and diaspora networks. They also receive disbursals from national and international NGOs, as well as from UN-managed funds. While international aid is blocked, the kitchens deal with local traders – some affiliated with the RSF – who are adept at navigating checkpoints and crossing front lines. Volunteers buy goods from them either in markets or straight from traders' houses. The kitchens operate from relatively space places and are set up so that nobody has to travel too far to reach them. On top of food, they function as communal spaces where teachers run alternative education programmes and women organise cooperatives. While volunteers often work long hours preparing the food, they have time to participate in social activities and to come “together and chat” as a group, said Jamal, a volunteer from Khartoum’s Al Jerief West locality. Several volunteers said their public service helps them feel powerful and resilient, and that before joining the kitchens they had felt traumatised by war and sometimes too afraid to leave their houses. “This is what keeps me staying in the conflict areas,” said Ibrahim, a coordinator of the Maygoma kitchen in the Sharg Alneel area of east Khartoum. “In my childhood, I used to pray to have enough money to help others, [but] I found out that it is not important to have money.” LOW FUNDING, INCREASED NEEDS: ‘EACH DAY WE SEE NEW FACES’ Despite their positive experiences, the half a dozen volunteers who spoke to The New Humanitarian said their kitchens lack adequate funding and resources, especially as the number of people in need balloons. Ibrahim, from the Maygoma kitchen, said volunteers used to cook lunch as well as breakfast for their community, but they are now only offering just one meal a day. “The number keeps increasing. Each day we see new faces,” he said. > The vast majority of donor money has gone to the UN and international NGOs > despite their limited access to the most conflict-affected places and the > restrictions warring parties place on them. Mustafa, a kitchen coordinator in Al Kalakla locality in south Khartoum, said his group had observed a “high number of returnees” who left the capital for adjoining Gezira state last year but came back after the RSF invaded it in December. Mustafa said 10 kitchens in a part of Al Kalakla called Abu Adam have a budget of just $800 each per month. He said he has seen people so hungry they are eating leaves from trees to survive. Local philanthropists and benefactors in the diaspora have provided critical contributions over the past year, but that funding “is decreasing with time because they have other responsibilities”, said Ibrahim. Emergency response rooms have received only a fraction of the hundreds of millions of dollars that international donors have provided to humanitarian actors in Sudan. The vast majority of donor money has gone to the UN and international NGOs – themselves badly stretched financially – despite their limited access to the most conflict-affected places and the restrictions warring parties place on them. “This is a really important part of the humanitarian response which isn't appropriately recognised or supported at the moment,” Will Carter, country director in Sudan for the Norwegian Refugee Council, told The New Humanitarian. “Out of a total aid appeal of over $2 billion, it's not that much to ask for between 2% and 5% at least for all these brave frontline responders that are providing very critical services in very neglected and hard to reach areas,” Carter added. Carter said one of the main problems is that donor governments have rigid policies and funding procedures that clash with how local response efforts are organised and with “what their priorities are and should be”. Some communal kitchens said they have reached out directly to international organisations for funding, but this approach can leave behind groups that don’t have strong English-language skills, or the ability to speak the language of international aid. BLACKOUTS, HIGH PRICES, AND SECURITY THREATS Fundraising and outreach efforts have also been impacted by an internet blackout – reportedly imposed by the RSF – that means volunteers cannot easily do media awareness campaigns. The blackout is also challenging because it prevents emergency response rooms from accessing e-banking systems, which they use to receive and spend money amid cash shortages and bank closures, said Hassan, the coordinator for Greater Khartoum. While funding for the kitchens is low, the prices of goods can be incredibly high, according to volunteers and traders. One businessman working in Al Kalakla said “inflation is digging into people”, with sugar costing eight times its pre-war level. Traders bringing food into RSF-held areas said they are sometimes denied access at army-controlled checkpoints, which chokes supply and hikes up prices. They also have to contend with paramilitary forces stealing their stocks in markets. > The volunteer said the kitchen is now doing its activities “low profile”: > cooking inside people’s homes, and only distributing food to the most > vulnerable within their community. Electricity blackouts are another challenge, especially in areas where power is needed to pump up water from the Nile. Ibrahim, the Sharg Alneel volunteer, said the lack of water has periodically resulted in their kitchen work being suspended. Other volunteers cited a lack of cooking gas as a problem, with too little supply and unaffordable prices. Some kitchens have been cutting down trees and using firewood as a substitute. Security was also raised by volunteers as a critical challenge. Though RSF leaders have made statements supporting local humanitarian efforts, volunteers said they continue to get investigated and arrested based on spurious allegations that they are tied to the army. A volunteer from one kitchen (The New Humanitarian is not disclosing its name for security reasons) said the RSF closed down their operations after it published a recent statement condemning the paramilitary group’s violations against civilians. The volunteer said the kitchen is now doing its activities “low profile”: cooking inside people’s homes, and only distributing food to the most vulnerable within their community. Kitchens operating in areas held by the army and the de facto government also face security threats. These authorities see aid as a political and military resource, and are suspicious of volunteers receiving funds outside of a system they can control. WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE Going forward, Carter of the Norwegian Refugee Council called for donors to increase their financial flows to local response efforts, and suggested they should adapt some of their policies so as not to drown volunteers in paperwork and processes. “I think the point of this is not to require [mutual aid groups] to be NGOs but to find a model that supports them in delivering critical services in very difficult and dangerous parts of the country, [while] minimising any bureaucracies or burden,” he said. With more resources, Hassan, the Greater Khartoum kitchen coordinator, said the emergency response rooms would be able to set up local markets and bakeries across the region. For now, however, he said the groups are demanding that the warring parties allow volunteers to work safely, open humanitarian corridors for aid groups, and make progress on peace talks. Saja, who receives support from the kitchens in Sharg Alneel – one of the most populous parts of Khartoum – said another meal a day would go a long way to improving people’s lives. “There are many, many families that are totally depending on the kitchens,” she told The New Humanitarian. “Without them, I could not even imagine what our lives in this conflict would look like.” *The names of all Sudanese sources quoted in this article have been changed because of threats to local volunteers by the warring parties. Edited by Philip Kleinfeld. Share this article * Share on X (formerly Twitter) * Share on Facebook * Share via WhatsApp * Share via email RELATED STORIES * * Conflict * First person * 22 April 2024 A MUTUAL AID VOLUNTEER REFLECTS ON A YEAR OF WAR IN SUDAN * * Conflict * News feature * 4 March 2024 ‘WE ARE ON THE EDGE’: COMMUNICATION BLACKOUT THWARTS MUTUAL AID EFFORTS IN BESIEGED KHARTOUM * * Aid and Policy * Podcasts * 19 October 2023 RETHINKING HUMANITARIANISM | HOW MUTUAL AID IN SUDAN IS GETTING INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT * * Aid and Policy * News feature * 2 August 2023 HOW MUTUAL AID NETWORKS ARE POWERING SUDAN’S HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE * * Conflict * Feature * 2 June 2023 ‘I SEE IT AS MY DUTY TO HELP FOR AS LONG AS I CAN’: SUDANESE VOLUNTEERS ON SUPPORTING HOSPITALS AND OPPOSING THE WAR Get the day’s top headlines in your inbox every morning Starting at just $5 a month, you can become a member of The New Humanitarian and receive our premium newsletter, DAWNS Digest. DAWNS Digest has been the trusted essential morning read for global aid and foreign policy professionals for more than 10 years. Government, media, global governance organisations, NGOs, academics, and more subscribe to DAWNS to receive the day’s top global headlines of news and analysis in their inboxes every weekday morning. It’s the perfect way to start your day. Become a member of The New Humanitarian today and you’ll automatically be subscribed to DAWNS Digest – free of charge. GET THE LATEST HUMANITARIAN NEWS, DIRECT TO YOUR INBOX Sign up to receive our original, on-the-ground coverage that informs policymakers, practitioners, donors, and others who want to make the world more humane. Sign up BECOME A MEMBER OF THE NEW HUMANITARIAN Support our journalism and become more involved in our community. Help us deliver informative, accessible, independent journalism that you can trust and provides accountability to the millions of people affected by crises worldwide. Join Return to the homepage * About Us * Privacy * Syndication * Contact Us * Careers * X (formerly Twitter) * Facebook * YouTube © All rights reserved 2024 Return to top * Browse by theme * Browse by region * Browse by type * About us * Advanced Search * Become a member * Careers * Contact * Newsletters * Podcasts Close Menu * Aid and Policy * Conflict * Environment and Disasters * Climate change * Migration * Food * Health * Politics and Economics * Solutions and Innovations * Africa * East Africa * Burundi * Central African Republic * Republic of Congo * Djibouti * Democratic Republic of Congo * Ethiopia * Kenya * Rwanda * Somalia * South Sudan * Sudan * Tanzania * Uganda * Southern Africa * Lesotho * Madagascar * Malawi * Mozambique * South Africa * Zimbabwe * West Africa * Burkina Faso * Cameroon * Chad * Côte d’Ivoire * Gabon * Guinea * Liberia * Mali * Mauritania * Niger * Nigeria * Senegal * Sierra Leone * Americas * Brazil * Canada * Colombia * Haiti * Mexico * United States * Venezuela * Asia-Pacific * Afghanistan * Bangladesh * Indonesia * Myanmar * Nepal * Pakistan * Philippines * Sri Lanka * Europe * France * Germany * Greece * Italy * Spain * UK * Ukraine * Middle East * Egypt * Iraq * Israel * Jordan * Lebanon * Libya * Palestine * Syria * Turkey * Yemen * Global Issues * Analysis * Cheat Sheet * Feature * In-depths * Investigations * Multimedia * Photo features * Maps and Graphics * Film library * Photo library * News * News feature * Opinion * First Person * Podcast * Interactive WE USE COOKIES By clicking “Accept All Cookies”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyze site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts. Settings Accept All Cookies PRIVACY PREFERENCE CENTER When you visit any website, it may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. This information might be about you, your preferences or your device and is mostly used to make the site work as you expect it to. The information does not usually directly identify you, but it can give you a more personalized web experience. Because we respect your right to privacy, you can choose not to allow some types of cookies. Click on the different category headings to find out more and change our default settings. However, blocking some types of cookies may impact your experience of the site and the services we are able to offer. More information Allow All MANAGE CONSENT PREFERENCES STRICTLY NECESSARY COOKIES Always Active These cookies are necessary for the website to function and cannot be switched off in our systems. They are usually only set in response to actions made by you which amount to a request for services, such as setting your privacy preferences, logging in or filling in forms. You can set your browser to block or alert you about these cookies, but some parts of the site will not then work. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable information. PERFORMANCE COOKIES Performance Cookies These cookies allow us to count visits and traffic sources so we can measure and improve the performance of our site. They help us to know which pages are the most and least popular and see how visitors move around the site. All information these cookies collect is aggregated and therefore anonymous. If you do not allow these cookies we will not know when you have visited our site, and will not be able to monitor its performance. FUNCTIONAL COOKIES Functional Cookies These cookies enable the website to provide enhanced functionality and personalisation. They may be set by us or by third party providers whose services we have added to our pages. If you do not allow these cookies then some or all of these services may not function properly. TARGETING COOKIES Targeting Cookies These cookies may be set through our site by our advertising partners. They may be used by those companies to build a profile of your interests and show you relevant adverts on other sites. They do not store directly personal information, but are based on uniquely identifying your browser and internet device. If you do not allow these cookies, you will experience less targeted advertising. Back Button COOKIE LIST Search Icon Filter Icon Clear checkbox label label Apply Cancel Consent Leg.Interest checkbox label label checkbox label label checkbox label label Reject All Confirm My Choices