MSF Reports 3,300 Sexual Violence Victims in North and South Darfur
31 March 2026
MSF reports 3,300 sexual violence victims in North and South Darfur
March 31, 2026 (NYALA) – Medical charity MSF said on Tuesday it had treated 3,300 victims of sexual violence in Sudan’s North and South Darfur states over a period of less than two years.
Data and survivor testimony released by MSF indicated that Rapid Support Forces (RSF) fighters and allied militias are responsible for widespread and systemic sexual violence against women.
In a report titled “I have something to tell you: Surviving the sexual violence crisis in Darfur,” the group said 3,396 survivors sought treatment at MSF-supported facilities between January 2024 and November 2025.
Women and girls accounted for 97% of the victims treated. MSF emphasized that these figures represent only a small fraction of the true scale of the crisis, as many survivors cannot safely access care.
The report noted patterns of systematic abuse. In North Darfur, armed men were responsible for over 95% of cases, while in South Darfur, approximately 60% of assaults involved multiple perpetrators.
MSF based its findings on medical data, informed survivor testimonies, and interviews with 56 women leaders, midwives, researchers, and activists working in the region.
The report stated that MSF treated over 140 victims who fled to Tawila after the RSF seized El Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, on Oct. 26, 2025.
About 94% of these victims were attacked by armed men. Many reported being assaulted on displacement routes, often by multiple perpetrators in front of their families. Non-Arab communities were deliberately targeted as a means of humiliation.
Between December 2025 and January 2026, the organization identified 732 victims in displacement camps around Tawila. Women reported attacks both during their journey and within the camps.
Survivors received psychological first aid and clinical referrals. At the Daba Naira camp in Tawila, 206 victims received consultations specifically related to rape.
Most victims reached care approximately three months after the assault. This timeline correlates with the period following the fall of El Fasher and the surge in violence during displacement.
The report highlighted that overcrowding, lack of basic security, and unsafe conditions—including distant water points and insecure latrines—have increased the vulnerability of women.
Tawila, controlled by the Sudan Liberation Movement led by Abdul Wahid el-Nur, has transformed from a remote area into a shelter for over 715,000 displaced people living in critical conditions.
MSF also collected testimonies from 150 victims in the weeks following the RSF takeover of Zamzam camp, located 12 kilometres southwest of El Fasher.
Women and girls reported being beaten and threatened with knives and guns. In some cases, victims suffered gunshot wounds or had their hair shaved with razors after being raped.
Survivors reported explicit threats from RSF fighters who told them they would never be safe and warned they would be harmed again if they fled to Tawila or elsewhere.
The RSF took control of Zamzam camp, which housed half a million people, on April 15, 2025, following a three-day ground assault and months of shelling and drone strikes.
The report noted that sexual violence is not limited to active combat zones. It extends to flight routes, agricultural fields, markets, and displacement camps.
In South Darfur, which has been away from the main front lines since late 2023, MSF said sexual violence remains a “malignant part of daily life.”
Between January 2024 and November 2025, MSF treated 2,334 victims in South Darfur, with numbers increasing steadily each month throughout the previous year.
The data showed 34% of victims were attacked while farming or on their way to fields, while 22% were assaulted while collecting firewood, water, or food.
Children are also among the survivors. In South Darfur, one in five survivors was under the age of 18, including 41 children under the age of five.
Women in South Darfur described feeling effectively imprisoned in their homes. Rape has become an unavoidable risk on roads and in markets surrounding displacement camps on the outskirts of Nyala.
Life in South Darfur, which has been under RSF control since October 2023, is defined by insecurity, impunity, and rising rates of killing, looting, and sexual violence.

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