Dr. Javid Abdelmoneim leads MSF medical teams in war-torn Sudan, where they work to save pregnant women and newborns dying at alarming rates as the country’s healthcare system collapses under the weight of ongoing conflict.

Sudan’s ongoing civil war has created what Dr. Javid Abdelmoneim of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) describes as an “enormous emergency,” causing the world’s largest humanitarian disaster as it enters its second year. Working as a medical team leader in Khartoum, Abdelmoneim witnesses firsthand how conflict disproportionately affects the most vulnerable populations.
The war has decimated Sudan’s healthcare system, leading to preventable deaths that often go uncounted in official statistics. These include newborns who die due to maternal malnutrition, women who die during childbirth without proper care, and patients with chronic conditions like diabetes who can’t access medication.
“Conflict is devastating for a population,” Abdelmoneim said in an interview with The Guardian. “You have unborn children affected by war. If they are born at all, they’re underweight, the mother can’t breastfeed them, they’re more at risk of infection, they’re not going to get their vaccinations.”

The maternal health crisis is particularly severe. In one Darfur hospital supported by MSF, one in every 30 women died from pregnancy or childbirth complications in July 2024. Women lack access to antenatal care and often arrive at hospitals too late, suffering from infections and sepsis.
For Abdelmoneim, this mission carries personal significance. His father is Sudanese, and he lived in the country as a child before later training in emergency medicine in the UK. He joined MSF full-time three years ago after leaving his NHS position.
Despite the immense challenges and personal connection to the destruction he witnesses, Abdelmoneim remains focused on the lives his team saves. “The hope is on that patient at the bedside, that patient we saved today who is walking out smiling. There are plenty of those,” he said in the interview with The Guardian.
Read the story by Sarah Johnson for The Guardian from January 12, 2025: ‘It’s an enormous emergency’: the doctor saving Sudan’s most vulnerable
Watch this video about MSF in Sudan, from 2023:
Related Articles
Steadfast Care Amid Sudan’s Devastation: Dr. Jamal Eltaeb Receives Aurora Prize
Dr. Jamal Eltaeb has been awarded the 2025 Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity for keeping Al Nao Hospital operating as one of the last functioning facilities in greater Khartoum despite bombardment, shortages, and Sudan’s collapsing health system.
From War to Healing: Stories of Care and Survival in Chad
International Medical Corps is delivering lifesaving aid in Chad, where refugees fleeing violence in Sudan are seeking safety and care.
Medical Care in the Hardest Places: Dr. Jill Seaman’s Three Decades in South Sudan
For more than 30 years, physician Jill Seaman has treated infectious diseases through South Sudan Medical Relief in one of the world’s most remote and conflict-affected regions, saving thousands of lives in conditions most would consider impossible.