Sudan Dismembered: The Geopolitics of Displacement, Act II

El Fasher’s fall is not a local tragedy — it is a geopolitical execution.
A sovereign state, already bled dry by proxy wars and looted by mercenaries, is being converted into a dumping ground for the region’s moral refuse.
From Katz’s plan to deport Palestinians to the hybrid war waged by Wagner and the UAE in Darfur, one single logic unfolds: displacement as policy, chaos as profit, Africa as laboratory.

Sudan — once a pillar of the African continent — is being methodically crushed, not for what it is, but for what it can serve.
On August 13, 2025, the Sudanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement of rare firmness:

“Sudan categorically rejects the allegations that it has agreed to host displaced Palestinians.”

The very clear statement issued by the Sudanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs on August 13, 2025.

That declaration responded to a plan formulated by Israel Katz, Israel’s Minister of Defense, who proposed to “relocate” the people of Gaza to parts of East Africa — notably Sudan and South Sudan.
Behind its humanitarian varnish lies a deportation plan — a political project of mass expulsion.
Khartoum, though ravaged by war, still finds the strength to say no:
no to humiliation,
no to manipulation,
no to the transformation of Africa into a dumping ground for the Palestinian question.

What is happening today in El-Fasher, capital of a sovereign state now gangrened by hidden forces, proves that Netanyahu’s Israel adheres to Donald Trump’s “Peace Plan” only in appearance — while still conspiring to create the conditions for the realization of its own plan.

Two months later, El Fasher falls.

The city collapses under shells and dust.
Hospitals burn, civilians flee, the sky fills with drones.
The Rapid Support Forces — the recycled Janjawid — complete their conquest of El Fasher with the logistical and technical assistance of the Wagner network, now rebranded as Africa Corps, the Kremlin’s armed extension on the continent.
Their weapons, their drones, their instructors come from Russia, which feeds on the decomposition of African states as a lever of global negotiation.
And who pays for this? Gold. Always gold.
Gold from Darfur, torn from the mines under militia guard, exported to Dubai, melted into the laundering circuits of the Gulf.
The United Arab Emirates, through economic complacency and political silence, finance the devastation they pretend to soothe.
And, in the height of cynicism, it is this same axis — Moscow, Abu Dhabi, Tel Aviv — that stands behind the façade of “stabilisation.”

This is no longer coincidence; it is a monstrous convergence.
A hideous hybridisation in which everyone profits:

Russia, extending its tentacles over Africa, dressing its plunder in anti-Western rhetoric;

The Emirates, turning chaos into financial flows and aligning, without saying it, with Netanyahu’s doctrine — reject the Palestinian, delegitimise his cause, dissolve his suffering into the rhetoric of security;

Israel, finally, pursuing by other means the morbid dream of a Greater Israel cleansed of Gaza, searching amid Sudan’s ruins for the space where it might deport those it no longer wants to see.

This chain of reality is no theory — it writes itself before our eyes.
On August 13, 2025, a sovereign state rises up against the idea of hosting refugees whom others seek to expel.
On October 26, 2025, that same state watches its last provincial capital fall under the bullets and drones of a militia maintained by Russian networks and financed by gold flowing through the Gulf.
Between those two dates, the link closes: the deportation of populations and the disintegration of a state belong to one and the same continuum of domination.

Sudan is no longer merely a field of ruins — it becomes the mirror of Gaza,
a mirror reflecting the methods of a world that knows no peace except through the destruction of maps.
And this must end.
Those responsible — Moscow, Abu Dhabi, Tel Aviv — must be named, exposed, and sanctioned.
The chain must be broken before other African states, too, are transformed into strategic dumping grounds for the perverted ambitions of powers that live off the chaos they create.

Sudan burns, and with it burns our last illusion —
that disintegration is an accident.
It is not.
It is a system.
And it is time for those who built it to pay.

Laisser un commentaire