Sudan: El Obeid families dying in drone strikes as hunger spreads, ground assault feared

Families in El Obeid, North Kordofan, are dying in drone strikes and facing extreme hunger despite repeated warnings, and the world has yet to act.
Press release
Sudan
Published 07. Jul 2026 - Updated 06. Jul 2026

The city, increasingly encircled, is facing drone attacks and growing fears of a wider assault by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF). The Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) and partners had warned two weeks ago that atrocities could follow such a move. But reports from the ground show that for many families still inside, the nightmare is already unfolding. 

In El Obeid, families are starving while dodging indiscriminate attacks just to stay alive,” said NRC Secretary General Jan Egeland. “The world has been warned about this crisis and let it happen anyway.”  

At least 45 civilians were killed in the city in just three weeks in June, according to the UN, as drone attacks repeatedly hit markets, schools, fuel stations, water infrastructure and vehicles. Just last week, an aid convoy, on the way to the city, was hit by a strike. In some areas, no aid has reached families for months, according to local partners.  

NRC calls for immediate protection of civilians, aid workers and local responders in and around El Obeid, including concrete steps to stop strikes on hospitals, schools, markets and water, electricity and fuel infrastructure. Emergency funding is urgently needed as well as unfettered humanitarian access to El Obeid and the Kordofans. 

The crisis is pressing into the most basic parts of daily life. With water facilities out of service, families have to queue for long hours to get water that is often unsafe for drinking. Once they manage to bring water home, they must choose whether to use it to drink, cook or wash. As the rainy season begins, the threat of cholera and other water-borne diseases is looming. 

Many families are forced to mix flour with water just to fill their children’s stomachs because nothing else is left or they cannot afford the spiralling food prices.  

Schools are kept open despite the violence to offer children a sense of normalcy. But, each week, multiple strikes have forced NRC and partners to suspend classes on some days. In some classrooms, children’s play has turned into re-enactments of shelling, and many can now name weapons by the sound they make alone.  

“Children go to school with no water, no electricity and no food, in buildings that cannot protect them from the strikes overhead,” said Egeland. “At times, local responders deliver aid at night, because daylight has become more dangerous than darkness.” 

With fuel stations struck or shut and vehicles targeted on the roads, transport costs have soared. NRC staff report that one litre of fuel now costs more than a teacher’s monthly salary. Some families are selling their belongings to afford a way out, but most simply cannot.  

For many of the city’s displaced people who already escaped horrors in Al Fasher and other devastated areas, there is nowhere else to go. More families are also arriving, fleeing the violence around the city. They now risk living the very horrors they tried to escape.  

“The atrocities committed throughout this war leave no doubt about what is at stake. The international community must now exert maximum pressure on the warring parties and those with influence over them. History will judge not only those who committed these crimes, but also those who had the power to help prevent them and failed to act," said Egeland. 

Notes to editors: 

  • El Obeid, capital of North Kordofan, is home to around half a million people, according to the UN, including over 80,000 displaced people who fled violence elsewhere in Sudan, with new arrivals still coming from South and West Kordofan (IOM). Local sources believe the real number may now be considerably higher as displacement into the city continues. 

  • NRC and partners warned on 20 June that atrocities could follow the city’s ground assault (NGO Forum). 

  • At least 45 civilians were killed in El Obeid in just three weeks in June (UN). 

  • Just last week, an aid convoy, on the way to the city, was hit by a drone strike (UNHCR). 

  • Since the beginning of 2026, NRC has reached 13,500 people in El Obeid through cash transfers. NRC has also recently reached over 7,500 people with emergency kits that include blankets, plastic sheets, sleeping mats, jerrycans, and solar lamps, as well as 1,500 families with hygiene kits. 

  • NRC supports five learning centres in the city, helping over 5,000 children catch up on missed education and transition back into formal schooling, as well as through psychosocial work that helps them overcome trauma. 

For more information or to arrange an interview, please contact: 

  • Elias Abu Ata, communications and media adviser in Sudan: elias.abuata@nrc.no, +962 788 980 980 (reachable via WhatsApp) 

  • NRC global media hotline: media@nrc.no, +47 905 62 329