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Sudan clinics face stock-out in weeks due to Middle East war, NGO says

By Thomson Reuters Mar 17, 2026 | 6:58 AM

By Olivia Le Poidevin and Emma Farge

GENEVA, March 17 (Reuters) – Medical supplies to clinics dealing with the humanitarian crisis in Sudan could run out within two weeks unless shipments are rapidly rerouted after disruptions due to ​the conflict in the Middle East, the charity Save the Children said.

The ‌expanding U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has shaken global supply chains, with airspace closures and the halt of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

Some $600,000 worth of essential medicines are stuck in ports in Dubai, the charity said.

About 90 Sudanese government-run clinics serving roughly 400,000 patients rely on the charity’s ‌supply ​of medicines, vaccines and nutritional treatment, with no in-country ⁠alternative, Save the Children’s global ⁠director of supply chain safety, Willem Zuidema, told Reuters.

Sudan’s three-year conflict has displaced millions of people and triggered one of the world’s largest humanitarian crises.

“We have a couple of weeks to do this rerouting before the country’s stocks run ​out. The clock is ticking,” Zuidema said, adding that once buffer stocks are exhausted patients would not be able to access basic healthcare support.

The medicines, which include ⁠antibiotics, antimalarials, pain and fever medication, and paediatric ⁠injectable drugs, normally enter via Port Sudan and travel by ​road to areas including Darfur.

UN aid chief Tom Fletcher said last week the Middle East ​conflict is straining humanitarian supply chains, with sub-Saharan Africa and Gaza ‌under particular pressure.

RISING COSTS, DONOR CUTS COMPOUND CRISIS

The World Health Organization also warned of growing medical supply shortages in Sudan. “There’s a huge crunch in Sudan, of course, and there’s also a bigger crunch in medical commodities going into certain provinces,” WHO regional ⁠director Hanan Balkhy said.

Rising transport costs are impacting aid budgets heavily constrained by major donor cuts, Save the Children said, with container freight rates rising about 25–30% as some shipping ⁠firms reroute vessels around ‌the Cape of Good Hope, adding weeks to delivery times.

The ⁠level of disruption to freight and subsequent cost impact may be ​worse than ‌in the initial stages of the Ukraine war and ​COVID pandemic, because ⁠there is little buffer in the system after the aid cuts, Zuidema said.

“Demand will go up, but the means for us to respond – especially with the increasing fuel prices driving up cost – will go down. That’s extremely worrying.”

Save the Children’s country budget for Sudan this year has been slashed by $4 million to $98 million.

(Reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin, ​edititng by Andrei Khalip)