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David Lammy 'horrified' after meeting Sudan war victims face-to-face

Anne Soy
BBC News, Adré
BBC David Lammy in a white amidst a crowd of Sudanese people newly arrived in Chad and aid workers. BBC

Every day families stream over a dry and dusty path into Chad, fleeing war and famine in Sudan - scenes that have clearly shaken the UK's foreign secretary.

Under the sweltering sun, David Lammy visited the Adré border post on Friday to witness first-hand the impact of Sudan's civil war which erupted when the army and its former ally, the paramilitary Rapid Forces (RSF), fell out.

Those who make it over the border have often been separated from their families in the chaos to escape and are desperate to see if their relatives have made it over safely.

"It's some of the most horrific things I've ever heard and seen in my life," said Lammy.

"Overwhelmingly, what I've seen here in Chad, on the border with Sudan, are women and children fleeing for their lives - telling stories of widespread slaughter, mutilation, burning, sexual violence against them, their children. And amongst it all, famine, hunger - such unbelievable plight."

The foreign minister saw the dozens of women wrapped in light, multicoloured shawls and holding children of different ages crossing over on horse-drawn carts.

They looked weary sitting on bags holding the few belongings they could bring with them in the long journey to safety.

"Alhamdulillah" meaning "praise be God", remarks Halima Abdalla when I asked her how she felt to have made it over the border.

The 28-year-old is relieved despite the tragedy she has suffered losing one of her children as she fled from Darfur, Sudan's western region, which has suffered some of the most devastating violence over the last 21 months - much of it alleged to have been perpetrated by the RSF.

"I first went to el-Geneina, but I had to run again when fighting broke out there," she says, explaining how she then became separated from her husband and two other children.

A seated aid worker in Chad looks after his shoulder as he hands paperwork to a woman who is in a line of newly arrived people from Sudan
Aid workers ing the newly arrived try and reunite those who became separated from relatives and children as they fled

Aid workers in Adré say they have been trying to reunite families once they crossed the border.

"Some mothers have told us they had to choose which children to run with as they couldn't carry all of them at one go," an aid worker told the BBC.

Some abandoned children have been brought by humanitarian workers across the border and are put in foster care while efforts are made to find their families.

Standing on the Chadian side of the border, Lammy spoke to families that were fleeing and aid workers who were receiving them.

After meeting some of the refugees, he told the BBC: "All of these people have stories - very, very desperate stories of fleeing violence, of murder in their families, of rape, of torture, of mutilation."

"I just sat with one woman who showed me burn marks. She had been burned by soldiers up and down her arms, she had been beaten and she had been raped. This is desperate, and we must bring the world's attention to it and bring the suffering to an end."

But he decried what he described as a "hierarchy of conflict" that has seemingly placed Sudan's at the bottom, even though it is currently the world's largest humanitarian crisis.

In November last year, the UK foreign secretary spearheaded a resolution calling for a ceasefire at the UN Security Council, which Russia vetoed.

"How could you veto the plight that is going on here":[]}