UNESCO intensifies support for Sudan amid ongoing conflict, focusing on education restoration, cultural heritage protection, and journalist safety as the crisis enters its third year.
UNESCO intensifies support for Sudan amid ongoing conflict, deploying emergency initiatives to address the escalating humanitarian and cultural crises as the conflict enters its third year.
The organization dedicates its efforts toward revamping the education system and cultural heritage protection as well as journalist safety initiatives.
The educational response coordinated by UNESCO includes 34 national and international organizations to aid 17 million Sudanese children who lack schooling due to school closures across the country.
Transitional Educational Plan constitutes the core element of this initiative by establishing strategic directions until 2027.
The plan receives support from $400 million in confirmed funding to achieve its goals of restoring education access and improving teaching standards while building up the education infrastructure.
Two agricultural training centers should emerge in eastern Sudan through immediate efforts to establish these centers which resolve food insecurity and create employment opportunities for youth.
The National Museum of Sudan and other cultural sites in Sudan faced extensive looting which led UNESCO to digitize more than 1700 cultural objects and 100 ancient manuscripts that were at risk.
Security preparations along with emergency stabilizations exist for the World Heritage sites which include the Archaeological Sites of the Island of Meroe and Gebel Barkal.
UNESCO plans to organize a regional training session in Cairo for Sudan together with nine neighboring countries to strengthen international cooperation through specialized artifact recovery methods for anti-trafficking operations.
The ongoing conflict has forced more than 90% of Sudanese media professionals together with all media organizations to shut down their operations.
The organization has issued nine condemnations against deadly attacks on media professionals between April and the present.
Cultural authorities maintain continuous monitoring of journalist safety.
The organization works to secure journalists while upholding their right to free and safe operation because they play an essential role in sharing information during wars.
Through its thorough strateg,y UNESCO strives to handle Sudan’s conflict-related problems and safeguard national culture while bringing back educational access alongside media freedom.