Dozens of Sudanese exiles flooded Downing Street on Wednesday, their voices raw with urgency.
They came to sound the alarm: Sudan teeters on total breakdown after RSF forces seized El-Fasher, the army’s last western fortress.
This two-year war now threatens to split Africa’s third-largest nation a nightmare 14 years after South Sudan’s birth.
UAE Arms Fuel Genocide
Chants targeted the United Arab Emirates, accused of supplying RSF commander Hemedti a charge UAE officials deny.
“Emirati bullets slaughter our families while leaders look away,” declared Elhussein Yassin. “This is genocide we demand justice!”
Ziyad Kashan clutched a photo of home:
“Entire cities Bahri, Khartoum reduced to ash. I’m trapped in exile. My heart bleeds.”
War’s Brutal Scorecard
- Over 40,000 lives lost
- 14 million uprooted half are kids
- UN labels it the planet’s gravest emergency
Both sides stand accused of massacring civilians.
Demands to World Leaders
Protesters waved signs:
- “Cut UAE Arms NOW!”
- “Deploy UN Peacekeepers!”
- “End the Silence!”
They urged a global boycott of UAE trade until weapon flows stop.
Losing the city blocks aid corridors, strangles military supply, and revives Darfur’s 2003 horrors where hundreds of thousands died.
A Plea from the Diaspora
“Winter starvation looms,” warned organizers. Famine stalks millions. One child’s drawing on a placard: “Don’t Let Sudan Die.”
Will the World Wake Up?
London’s rally sent a clear message: Inaction equals complicity. As RSF advances, time runs out.
What must leaders do to stop Sudan’s fall?
