At least 30 newborn babies have tragically died in hospitals since the fighting erupted in last month, according to the UN’s .
Six newborns were killed in a week alone in the city of Eld'aeen in East , where the violence has exacerbated electricity blackouts and the supply of oxygen in hospitals.
Sudan’s health sector has been devastated due to the recent fighting, as Sudan’s military battles the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in the streets of its major cities, including Khartoum.
Multiple efforts at ceasefires have failed, as humanitarian organisations struggle to provide help to the millions who have been affected.
At least 863 people have been killed so far in the fighting, according to the Sudan Doctor’s Syndicate, while hundreds of thousands have attempted to flee their homes to safety.
Rights groups and NGOs have warned of a larger humanitarian disaster, as Sudan’s neighbours - including South Sudan, Chad and Egypt - are ill-equipped to cater to the needs of thousands of refugees.
The fighting erupted following years of tensions between army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and RSF chief Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, popularly known as Hemedti. Most immediately, the fighting was caused as Burhan and Hemedti were outlining a plan to transition Sudan to a civilian government.
The hopes for civilian rule, however, appear to have gone up in smoke.