Sudan: MSF denounces violent attacks leading to suspension of activities at key Khartoum hospital

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) strongly condemns ongoing violent attacks on patients and staff at Bashair Teaching Hospital, located in a Rapid Support Forces-controlled area of Khartoum. Despite extensive engagements with all stakeholders, these attacks have continued in recent months. MSF has now taken the very difficult decision to suspend all medical activities in the hospital.

In the 20 months MSF teams have worked alongside hospital staff and volunteers, Bashair Hospital has experienced repeated incidents of armed fighters entering the hospital with weapons and threatening medical staff, often demanding fighters be treated before other patients.

On 11 November 2024, a patient was shot and killed inside the hospital. On 18 December, attackers fired weapons inside the emergency ward, directly threatening medical staff. In an earlier incident, weapons were fired at the hospital, bullets entered the hospital compound, and one person was wounded.

The bullet marks left by Rapid Support Forces soldiers inside the emergency room of Bashair Teaching Hospital in South Khartoum | Date taken: 19/12/2024 | Copyright: MSF | Location: Sudan
The bullet marks left by Rapid Support Forces soldiers inside the emergency room of Bashair Teaching Hospital in South Khartoum | Date taken: 19/12/2024 | Copyright: MSF | Location: Sudan
“The suffering we witness in Khartoum is enormous. Intense and extreme violence continues daily. Shortages and blockages of food, supplies and humanitarian aid leave people scrambling to survive. The medical needs are overwhelming. Injuries are often horrific. Mass casualty incidents have become almost routine,” said Claire San Filippo, MSF Emergency Coordinator. “Our team, hospital staff and volunteers have worked tirelessly in very difficult conditions to provide the medical care. But without the security to operate safely it has become untenable to continue when the lives of our staff and patients are threatened.”

Bashair Hospital is one of the last functioning hospitals in south Khartoum offering free medical care. Since the end of September, the hospital has seen a surge in cases of people arriving with violent trauma injuries as fighting has escalated. 

Bashair Teaching Hospital located in southern Khartoum, one of very few hospitals that is operational in Khartoum and where the MSF surgical team works. | Date taken: 13/05/2023 | Photographer: Ala Kheir | Location: Sudan
Bashair Teaching Hospital located in southern Khartoum, one of very few hospitals that is operational in Khartoum and where the MSF surgical team works. | Date taken: 13/05/2023 | Photographer: Ala Kheir | Location: Sudan

Sometimes dozens of people arrived at the hospital at the same time after shelling or airstrikes on residential areas and markets. On Sunday 5 January 2025, 50 people were brought to the emergency room – 12 of them already dead – after an airstrike one kilometre from the hospital.

At the same time, our teams have seen an increase in paediatric and maternity cases as other health facilities have closed down or reduced services. We have also been responding to cholera, malaria and dengue outbreaks and seeing very worrying levels of malnutrition.

The hospital has already faced serious difficulties. In October 2023, all surgeries were temporarily suspended after surgical supplies were blocked by the Sudanese Armed Forces. The transport of medical supplies and staff movements from Port Sudan have now been blocked for more than a year. MSF has previously had to suspend medical activities at nearby Turkish Hospital in July last year as a result of threats to and violence against staff.

Dr Sarah Hassan Ibrahim. Sarah used to work for the Ministry of Health at the
​
emergency response department in the hospital. After the current conflict started in Khartoum, Sarah
​
took over as medical director at Bashair hospital. Sarah worked with medical staff from other hospitals.
​ They came to Bashair when it was closed and there was literally no one there.They managed to get
​ the hospital to start receiving patients. Sarah says “It was a relief to have MSF team here as the
​ demand especially on the operating theatre team and other medical staff was huge”. | Date taken: 13/05/2024/ | Photographer: Ala Kheir | Location: Sudan
Dr Sarah Hassan Ibrahim. Sarah used to work for the Ministry of Health at the

emergency response department in the hospital. After the current conflict started in Khartoum, Sarah

took over as medical director at Bashair hospital. Sarah worked with medical staff from other hospitals.
​ They came to Bashair when it was closed and there was literally no one there.They managed to get
​ the hospital to start receiving patients. Sarah says “It was a relief to have MSF team here as the
​ demand especially on the operating theatre team and other medical staff was huge”. | Date taken: 13/05/2024/ | Photographer: Ala Kheir | Location: Sudan
“It is devastating to have to stop supporting lifesaving medical care at this hospital, particularly in the face of such great and growing medical needs. Every time an organisation is forced to suspend activities, patients have less access to medical care they desperately need,” said San Filippo. “Hospitals must be places where people can seek healthcare without risking their lives and where medical professionals can safely deliver care.”

An MSF team first joined volunteers and medical staff who had reopened the hospital in May 2023, shortly after the start of the war. Between May 2023 and December 2024, the hospital treated 25,585 patients in the emergency room, more than 9,000 due to violence, such as blast and gunshot wounds.

During the same period, the team performed 3,700 surgical procedures – the vast majority violence-related injuries – and assisted in almost 3,800 deliveries, including 850 caesarean sections. MSF continues to work in 11 states in Sudan, including the city of Omdurman in Khartoum state. We hope that conditions will allow us to return to Bashair Hospital in the future and restart medical activities.

 

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Nkosi Mahlangu

Nkosi Mahlangu

Communications Specialist, Doctors Without Borders (MSF Southern Africa)

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