Children in Sudan face growing danger as cholera spreads amid funding cuts, World Vision warns

Children in Sudan face growing danger as cholera spreads
Tuesday, July 15, 2025

 Port Sudan – 15 July 2025: As Sudan battles a deadly and rapidly spreading cholera outbreak, millions of children are at grave risk. More than 700 people have died, including children, and 32,000 suspected cases have been  recorded since January 2025. The outbreak now affects 17 of the country’s 18 states, compounding the suffering of families already devastated by conflict, forced displacements, and a collapsing health system.

Among the most vulnerable are 3.2 million malnourished children under the age of five, whose weakened immune systems leave them susceptible to cholera and other waterborne diseases. The rainy season is worsening the situation, accelerating the spread of cholera in overcrowded sites for internally displaced persons (IDPs) and refugee camps. So far, 165 deaths and over 11,500 cases of infected people have been reported in internal displacement sites, while refugee settlements have reported 15 deaths and 278 cases. 

“This is not just a public health crisis, it is a crisis of childhood, of dignity and of survival,” said Simon Mane, World Vision’s National Director in Sudan. “Children are dying from preventable diseases because we lack adequate resources to respond. While we are doing our best with limited funding, we cannot meet the growing humanitarian needs exacerbated by the security crisis.”

World Vision Sudan has already initiated emergency lifesaving health and WASH (Water Sanitation and Health) interventions in affected and pre-positioned states using limited resources. However, urgent and scaled-up support is needed to contain the outbreak and prevent further loss of life – especially during this rainy season in support of the Ministry of Health.

In the hardest-hit states of Blue Nile, Red Sea, East Darfur, South Kordofan, and South Darfur, World Vision has delivered cholera treatment kits to nearly 9,000 people and provided emergency WASH services to over 25,000. As the outbreak rapidly spreads, existing efforts are being stretched thin due to inadequate funding.

Critical funding gaps are slowing down prevention, treatment, and rapid response. Without urgent support, thousands more could fall ill or die.

To address the scale of the emergency, World Vision is appealing for USD $5 million to expand life-saving services, especially for children and families in the hardest-to-reach areas. 

“Every day we wait means more children get sick and more may not survive,” added Mane. “We are calling on the global community to act now, before this crisis claims even more young lives.”

Without a coordinated and well-funded response, the disease could spiral into a broader regional health emergency. The disease continues to surge in Darfur, prompting fears of cross-border spread into new locations of Chad, Ethiopia and South Sudan which already has a high caseload. 

World Vision urgently calls upon the international community, donors and partners to provide immediate and substantial funding to scale up this critical response. Without collective action and solidarity, the cholera outbreak will continue its devastating trajectory, further compounding the already dire and urgent humanitarian crisis in Sudan.

“Every moment of delay puts more lives at risk. Let us come together to contain this deadly outbreak and bring hope and healing to the people of Sudan,” said Mane.

/END

For more information contact:

Grace Mavhezha, Communications and Public Engagement Manager, World Vision Sudan, grace_mavhezha@wvi.org

About World Vision:

World Vision is a global Christian humanitarian organization dedicated to working with children, families, and communities to overcome poverty and injustice. Serving the world’s most vulnerable people, World Vision partners with communities to create lasting change.