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Sudan drone strikes: What's happening and why it matters

When you hear Sudan drone strikes, targeted aerial attacks using unmanned military aircraft in the midst of Sudan’s civil war. Also known as unmanned aerial strikes, these operations have become a central tool in the fighting between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces since April 2023. Unlike traditional warfare, drone strikes allow one side to hit targets without risking pilots—making them cheap, precise, and terrifyingly easy to use in urban areas.

These strikes aren’t random. They target weapons depots, command centers, and sometimes markets or hospitals. The result? Thousands of civilians dead or displaced. In places like El Fasher and Khartoum, families sleep in basements not because they’re afraid of gunfire—but because they know a drone could come at any time. The military drones, remotely piloted aircraft used for surveillance and precision strikes involved often come from foreign suppliers, turning Sudan into a testing ground for new drone tech. And while the world watches, little changes on the ground.

The Sudan conflict, a brutal civil war between two military factions that erupted in 2023 and has since torn the country apart isn’t just about power—it’s about survival. Drone strikes have shifted the balance. They’ve made it harder for rebels to organize, but also harder for civilians to escape. Aid workers can’t reach people. Hospitals can’t operate. And every strike adds another name to the growing list of the dead.

What you’ll find in the articles below isn’t just news. It’s a record of real people caught in a war that’s being fought with technology most of us don’t fully understand. Some posts cover the latest attacks. Others dig into who’s supplying the drones. A few talk to survivors. Together, they show how a single machine in the sky can change the fate of a whole city.

UN Condemns Deadly Drone Strikes on Sudan Nursery and Hospital Killing Dozens of Children

UN Condemns Deadly Drone Strikes on Sudan Nursery and Hospital Killing Dozens of Children

UN condemns deadly drone strikes on a kindergarten and hospital in Kalogi, Sudan, killing up to 114 civilians including 63 children. The RSF and SPLM-N faction are blamed in a war that has displaced over 10 million.

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