Hello and welcome to news from the BBC World Service coming to you live from our studios in central London.
I'm Julian Marshall.
A falling out between two warlords in Sudan two years ago has led to the world's worst humanitarian crisis and an upheaval in millions of lives.
Oh my god, it's flying over.
It's so close.
Yeah, I think you can hear it now.
Get down,
get down that young woman in the Sudanese capital cartoon was shouting on the line to us as a fighter jet flew over her home on April the 15th,
2023.
The two military factions that together had seized power from a transitional civilian government had gone to war with each other.
The paramilitary rapid support forces against the Sudanese National Army.
Two years on, the army has managed to rest back control of the capital.
But the fighting elsewhere in this It's also the millions who've been displaced, the tens of millions who are hungry.
The RSF may have been driven out of cartoon, but they're trying to strengthen their hold in the west of the country.
El Fasha, the capital of North Darfur, is the last city in the region still holding out against the RSF.
No journalists have been able to reach El Fasha,
people living there shared exclusive footage with the BBC capturing their daily battle to survive.
Habibita has this report, which begins in neighboring Chad.
This woman sings at a woman's support group at a camp in Adre Chad,
home to more than 250,000 refugees from Sudan, where a civil war has wreaked havoc since 2023.