World April 28, 2026 08:08 AM

UNICEF issues emergency 'Child Alert' as five million children in Darfur face extreme deprivation

Agency warns childhood in the region is defined by fear, loss and mounting hunger as conflict deepens

By Derek Hwang
UNICEF issues emergency 'Child Alert' as five million children in Darfur face extreme deprivation

The United Nations children’s agency says five million children in Sudan’s Darfur region are enduring severe deprivation as the civil war enters its fourth year. UNICEF issued a rare "Child Alert" — the first for Darfur in two decades — highlighting widespread destruction of homes, schools and health facilities, surging child casualties, and acute malnutrition reaching famine levels in parts of North Darfur.

Key Points

  • UNICEF has issued a "Child Alert" for Darfur, indicating five million children face extreme deprivation; this is the first such alert for Darfur in 20 years.
  • Destruction of homes, schools and health facilities has compounded risks to children, with at least 160 child fatalities and 85 injuries reported across Sudan in the first three months of 2026.
  • Acute malnutrition reached famine levels in two more areas of North Darfur in February, and al-Fashir has seen at least 1,300 children killed or maimed since April 2024 amid reports of sexual violence, abductions and child recruitment.

The United Nations children’s agency has raised a formal emergency alarm over conditions facing children in Sudan’s Darfur region, saying five million youngsters are now suffering extreme deprivation as the country’s civil war moves into its fourth year.

UNICEF applied its rarely-used "Child Alert" to signal that conditions for children in Darfur have crossed a critical threshold. The agency said the measure is designed to denote exceptionally severe circumstances and that this is the first time it has been issued for Darfur in 20 years.

"Children are at a breaking point across the region, childhood is again defined by fear, by loss. Homes have been burned, schools and health facilities have been damaged or destroyed," said Sheldon Yett, UNICEF’s representative in Sudan, speaking to reporters in Geneva via video link from Port Sudan.

Yett detailed the toll on children, saying: "Children are bearing the heaviest weight of the war in Darfur, children are being killed and maimed, uprooted from their homes and pushed into extreme hunger, disease and trauma."

Darfur, a vast area in western Sudan, has been a central theatre of violence in the conflict that began in April 2023 between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces. UNICEF noted the region’s long history of violence, including atrocities and mass displacement in a separate conflict that escalated in 2003 after rebels took up arms and the government employed Arab militias in efforts to suppress the revolt.

Despite the intensifying crisis, UNICEF said Darfur has drawn comparatively little global attention in recent weeks and months. The agency pointed to the low level of funding for its broader humanitarian appeal: the UNICEF humanitarian appeal for Sudan for the year is only 16% funded.

Across Sudan as a whole, UNICEF reported a sharp rise in child casualties in the early months of 2026. At least 160 children were reportedly killed and 85 injured in the first three months of 2026, an increase from the same period in the previous year, the agency said.

UNICEF identified the city of al-Fashir as experiencing the most severe impact on children. Since April 2024, at least 1,300 children in al-Fashir were killed or maimed, and there have been reports of sexual violence, abductions and recruitment of children by armed groups.

The agency also cited alarming levels of malnutrition: in February, the U.N.-backed Integrated Food Security Phase Classification found that acute malnutrition in two additional areas of North Darfur had reached famine levels.

UNICEF’s alert underscores the combined effects of violence, displacement, damaged infrastructure and worsening food insecurity that are eroding child wellbeing across Darfur. The agency’s warning is intended to galvanize attention and resources to address the urgent needs of millions of children at heightened risk.


Contextual note: The information above reflects UNICEF statements and UN-backed classifications cited by the agency. Where the agency indicates limited global attention and underfunding, that condition is reported as described by UNICEF.

Risks

  • Escalating child casualties and physical harm - impacts the health sector and humanitarian response capacity.
  • Severe underfunding of humanitarian appeals - constrains delivery of aid, affecting education, health and food security sectors.
  • Spread of acute malnutrition to additional areas - presents further strain on medical and nutrition services and humanitarian supply chains.

More from World

Russian Superyacht 'Nord' Crossed Strait of Hormuz with No Objection from Iran or U.S., Source Says Apr 28, 2026 Three Palestinians Killed in Gaza Strikes, Including 9-Year-Old Boy Apr 28, 2026 Tight Race in Brazil as Lula and Flavio Bolsonaro Neck-and-Neck in Runoff Simulation Apr 28, 2026 Displaced Lebanese Mechanic and Family Trapped in Uncertain Exile as Fighting Continues Apr 28, 2026 Finland and Estonia Report U.S. Defence Shipments Delayed Due to Middle East Conflict Apr 28, 2026