Inside the conflict

Journalists are banned from the Nuba mountains. This makes it extremely difficult for International media to cover the war and it’s impact on civilians. Nuba Reports brings together local journalists with professional editors and mentors in order to produce verifiable and compelling dispatches from the front lines.
But for the model to work, we need your help. Make this hidden conflict visible. Make it news.
Fighting broke out in June 2011 between Sudan’s government and Nuban rebels. Nuba Reports was founded by people living in the region after journalists and NGOs were banned. Our goal is to provide Sudan and the International community with credible and compelling dispatches from the front lines of this conflict and to illuminate the war’s impact on civilians. more
“I hope these protests continue until we get our rights.” A peaceful protest by university students in Khartoum on June 16th has spread throughout Sudan, with mass numbers of citizens…
Idris lost his wife and two of his four children when a bomb from an Antonov plane exploded near his home. “Shrapnel came and ate them,” Idris told our reporters….
On May 20, 2012, at exactly noon, approximately 2,000 soldiers in the Sudan Armed Forces and 2,000 South Sudanese militiamen rode 60 light vehicles into the village of Angolo. Kwicha,…
Kallo lost his home on April 29, 2012 when the Sudan government dropped bombs in the Kauda Valley. He showed the damage to Eyes and Ears Nuba reporters. Two other…
Since July 2011, more than thirty thousand refugees from Southern Kordofan have walked the twenty miles from Sudan to South Sudan to reach the Yida refugee camp. Ground fighting between…
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