Tom Fletcher, the UN’s top humanitarian official, is visiting Port Sudan, the de facto capital of Sudan. Meanwhile, a UN official told DW “dismal” international aid donations were severely hampering refugee assistance.

Sudan’s Transitional Sovereign Council shared a brief video on social media of Fletcher sitting in a room with President Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and other officials.
⭕️ رئيس مجلس السيادة يؤكد حرص السودان على الاحتفاظ بعلاقات وثيقة مع برنامج الغذاء العالمي
بورتسودان ١١-١١-٢٠٢٥م pic.twitter.com/fEvSy8ynvg
— مجلس السيادة الإنتقالي – السودان (@TSC_SUDAN) November 11, 2025
Fletcher, a veteran British diplomat and government advisor, meanwhile shared an image of the meeting online, and lauded the “positive” discussions early in his one-week visit to Sudan.
“Practical and positive exchange with General Al-Burhan on continued dialogue and cooperation to improve humanitarian access across Sudan. The UN appreciates the clear commitment to support us to deliver lifesaving aid everywhere it is needed,” Fletcher wrote.
Practical and positive exchange with General Al-Burhan on continued dialogue and cooperation to improve humanitarian access across Sudan.
The UN appreciates the clear commitment to support us to deliver lifesaving aid everywhere it is needed. pic.twitter.com/7TWRf0LATx
— Tom Fletcher (@UNReliefChief) November 11, 2025
Millions displaced in two-and-a-half year conflict, limited international response
Prior to his departure for Sudan, Fletcher had also issued an impassioned appeal at the UN Security Council, asking diplomats from around the world why the international response to more than two years of fighting had been so muted when compared to the genocide in Darfur in western Sudan two decades ago.
“What is different today is that we are seeing a different global reaction: one of resignation,” he told the Council. “So this is also a crisis of apathy.”
UN Charter pledged us to save generations from scourge of war, defend human rights and justice.
Amid horror of El Fasher we must return to those words as rebuke for international failure, and challenge that world can do better.
My remarks: https://t.co/IqO4NoxbY8 pic.twitter.com/rNCJNwOwOm
— Tom Fletcher (@UNReliefChief) October 30, 2025
Since the civil war erupted in April 2023 between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, tens of thousands have been killed and an estimated 12 million people have been displaced, either within Sudan or across its borders. This has created one of the world’s largest humanitarian crises.
The Transitional Sovereign Council (TSC) backed by the country’s military controls most of the north, east and center of Sudan, while the RSF controls most of Darfur, the vast region in western Sudan, and parts of the south.
RSF forces last month claimed control of el-Fasher, the last of the five regional capitals within Darfur, after a siege lasting more than a year, sending thousands fleeing.
The RSF said last week that it was willing to sign up to a humanitarian ceasefire proposal put forward by the US and other brokers, but the military government has not commented on the matter. Furthermore, reports of RSF attacks on army-held areas in regions like Kordofan and the capital Khartoum have persisted despite the group’s pledge.
Fletcher said that he would work during a visit lasting one week “to stop the atrocities, back peace efforts, uphold the UN charter, and push for our teams to get the access and funding they need to save lives across the battle lines.”
President Burhan meanwhile affirmed “Sudan’s keenness to cooperate with the United Nations and its various agencies,” according to the army-backed TSC.
‘Dismal’ international contributions impeding aid provision, UN official tells DW
Meanwhile, Kelly Clements, Deputy High Commissioner of the UNHCR refugee agency, spoke to DW on Tuesday soon after a visit to Chad’s region bordering western Sudan, where many of those fleeing Darfur head.
She described harrowing tales from people, often women and children, fleeing the fighting in el-Fasher.
“And the stories are horrific,” Clements said. Around 87% of the refugees were women and children, higher figures than average, she said. “The majority of women and girls have been assaulted or subject to sexual violence. We hear upwards of 70%.”
She said that cuts to international aid programs — perhaps most notably by the US President Donald Trump administration but also by a number of western governments including but not limited to Germany, the UK, France and Canada — were drastically impacting aid provision in Sudan and in countries like Chad, which are housing more and more Sudanese refugees.
“And because the funds that support us and support other aid providers has been so dismal, it’s been very, very difficult to provide the kind of support — medical, psychosocial and otherwise — that these new arrivals desperately need, including those that we want to reach inside Darfur,” Clements warned.
Source : https://www.dw.com/en/un-welcomes-aid-supply-talks-with-sudan-army/a-74705980

