Sudanese Prime Minister Abdallah Hamdok has called for African mediation to end the war and start talks between Ethiopia's federal government and the Tigray People's Liberation Front
Sudanese pound lost 40% of its value in one month and inflation jumped to 167%
Protesters want a better economy, peace with rebels, and an end to tribal clashes
The trial is considered a step toward a trial before the International Criminal Court
One man's Facebook group, which helps people share home gardening ideas, has seen its membership grow seven-fold
Demonstrators waved Sudanese flags and held pictures of those killed during the 2019 protests
Former Sudanese officials, including Omar al-Bashir, could face trial at the International Criminal Court
Typical Sudanese wedding has thousands of guests, but that is not possible now
Sudan’s frontline healthcare and infection control workers are doing their best to prevent the virus from spreading further, despite a healthcare system tattered by decades of civil war and sanctions
Streets are blocked and celebrations banned as citizens mark Omar al-Bashir's fall from power
The executions took place less than a year after Bashir took power in a 1989 military coup
The Sudanese military has said it will return the remains of 29 officers who were executed three decades ago to their families
Travelers were stranded when flights and bus service to Egypt was suspended
Witnesses say cars exploded near Abdallah Hamdok’s convoy in Khartoum
Move will allow humanitarian organizations to access war-scarred Darfur region
For religious leaders and some officials in Sudan, Israel remains a sensitive issue; hundreds of protesters rallied in Khartoum Tuesday, condemning the meeting and the idea of normalization of ties
In Khartoum, it’s common to see children working as traders, carpenters, blacksmiths, and at other jobs. Most earn $1 to $1.50 per day
Millions of children in Sudan go to work each day instead of to school, in part because of widespread poverty, and in part because the education system does not have the resources to accommodate them
Sudanese see the violence as a serious threat to the nation's security and its move toward democracy
The Sudanese hip-hop group Nas Jota returned to Sudan for a New Year’s Eve concert - their first show at home since 2004, when authorities banned their music for being political
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