🇸🇩 WHAT IS HAPPENING IN SUDAN? CHURCHES BURNED, CHRISTIANS EXECUTED - AND THE MEDIA SAYS NOTHING
Between October 26 and 31, over 2,000 civilians were killed in El Fasher, Sudan, after RSF forces stormed the city.
Entire neighborhoods were wiped out. The last functioning hospital was bombed, killing over 460 people. Aid workers were hunted and executed. Satellite images show blood-soaked sand and mass graves.
The UN is calling it a possible genocide, the worst violence since Darfur 2003.
Most of the victims were Muslim Masalit. But there’s another group being erased from the headlines: Sudan’s Christian minority.
Churches were burned. Christian families were executed. Videos verified by Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) show believers sheltering in churches before being attacked.
These weren't accidents. CSW confirms systematic targeting of Christians, including sexual violence and killings. Yet the global media barely reports it.
The pattern is familiar.
In Nigeria, entire Christian communities are attacked, and it's reported as “ethnic violence.”
Christianity is, by all data, the most persecuted religion in the world today. But when Christians are the victims, the story is softened, reframed, or ignored entirely.
Why is that?
All victims of war deserve justice. But selective outrage is complicity.
We can’t keep pretending Christian persecution doesn’t exist, especially when it’s caught on camera.
Sources: ABC News, BBC, UN News, CSW, Africa Global News,
csw.org.uk