16 hours ago
Natasha Booty
Some victims said they chose not to speak out because they feared staff would cut off access to aid.

16 hours ago
Natasha Booty

Getty Images
Medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) admits its staff were accused of sexually abusing at least 59 Sudanese refugees who had fled the civil war in search of safety.
Young girls were exploited in some cases, and often food or jobs were offered in exchange for sex.
The offences were committed in eastern Chad and date back to 2024 - about a year into Sudan's still-raging civil war.
The aid organisation also found patterns of exploitation that might amount to "sexual trafficking", its own internal report suggested in July.
Some of the victims reportedly chose not to speak out about the abuse because they feared access to vital aid would be withheld in retaliation. Those who did report the abuse sometimes received no reply or support, MSF has admitted in its own report, while official complaints procedures were mostly ineffective.
"This misconduct represents a serious breach of MSF's values and responsibilities, and we deeply regret the harm caused," MSF said in response to reporters at AP who first investigated the misconduct.
It is now widely recognised as the world's worst humanitarian crisis - more than 11 million people have been forced from their homes, and 28 million face acute hunger.
Although there is no definitive death toll, the dead are thought to number at least 150,000 and could be as high as 400,000.
Humanitarian workers in multiple countries around the world have been accused of sexual exploitation in recent years, despite promises to end such abuses.
More on Sudan's civil war:

Getty Images/BBC
BBC Africa podcasts

Thomas Partey will miss Ghana's World Cup opener after an appeal against the decision not to grant him a visa is turned down.

Protesters have set 30 June as the date for all undocumented migrants to leave the country.

Russia’s Africa Corps is shifting fighters out of Mali’s northern regions to protect the capital and the ruling junta while providing air support and intelligence to Malian soldiers in the field. “By and large they are taking more of a backseat role,” Benedict Manzin, lead Middle East and Africa ana

Artificial intelligence plays an increasing role in the way security services respond to disasters and humanitarian crises like floods and disease outbreaks. However, this technology relies on human expertise to analyze and develop strategies based on the data those systems produce. That was the ass