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CBS NewsonX / Twitter1d ago
As the civil war in Sudan enters its fourth year, the “disruption is just immense” for those living in active conflict zones, says Tjada D’Oyen McKenna, the CEO of Mercy Corps.
“You basically have people left with systems that they need to sustain life, like food systems, markets, health care, water, those systems have functionally collapsed for people,” she tells CBS News’ Major Garrett.
Trust Metrics
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Claim Accuracy92%
Source Quality95%
Framing & Tone88%
Context80%
Analysis Summary
Sudan's civil war has now lasted four years, and aid organizations report that basic systems people depend on—food, healthcare, water—have essentially stopped working in active conflict zones. This means people are struggling to access even basic necessities needed to survive. The post doesn't capture one key driver: fuel prices in Sudan have jumped over 24% due to effects of the Iran war on shipping, which is directly driving up food costs and worsening the crisis.
Claims Analysis (3)
“Sudan civil war enters its fourth year”
Multiple news sources confirm Sudan war entered fourth year in April 2026.
“Systems like food, health care, and water have functionally collapsed for people in conflict zones”
Corroborated by independent reporting describing humanitarian crisis and system failures in Sudan.
“Tjada D'Oyen McKenna is CEO of Mercy Corps”
Quote and title consistently verified across multiple news sources including AP reporting.
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