Al Nao hospital in Omdurman, led by Dr. Jamal Eltaeb, now needs $40,000 monthly to operate as support dwindles and fighting moves away from Khartoum.
Despite repeated bombings, severe supply shortages, and most staff fleeing, Eltaeb and a handful of volunteers kept the hospital open, treating mass casualties and improvising with limited resources.
Nearly 40% of Sudan’s hospitals are nonfunctional due to the ongoing conflict, with many destroyed or occupied by armed groups, leaving remaining facilities like Al Nao critical for local healthcare.
As drone attacks on Sudanese hospitals intensify, are medical staff now unavoidable targets?
Amidst genocide and famine, why is Sudan's humanitarian crisis so critically underfunded?
Can local heroes like Dr. Eltaeb truly save a nation abandoned by the world?
How does one doctor's prize money impact a health system where 70% of hospitals are destroyed?
With genocide declared in Darfur, will international justice ever reach the victims of Sudan's war?