UK faces ‘migration time bomb’ as horror war sends refugees to Britain | Politics | News
Britain faces a โmigration time bombโ as the collapse of Sudan in a brutal civil war threatens to create millions of refugees. The UK is to send ยฃ5million in aid to the stricken nation after the fall of the city of El Fasher brought scenes of horrifying atrocities. Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper condemned โmass executions, starvation and the devastating use of rape as a weapon of warโ.
But the worldโs failure to end the suffering will have a direct impact on the UK, according to foreign policy expert Tobias Ellwood. The former army captain and ex-MP, who served as Minister for Africa in the Foreign Office, said Sudanese refugees would head to Britain because of our historic links with the country.
He said: โWhat began as a power struggle between two rival generals has spiralled into a humanitarian catastrophe, displacing millions and destabilising the wider Horn of Africa. Yet the international community, including Britain, has blinked. Letting this civil war escalate is creating a migration time bomb that will soon reach our shores.
โWhy will fleeing families head here? Because we have deep history with Sudan. We used to run it. We shaped its early governance structures, institutions – and its borders. We developed its civil service and established schools and universities that once made Khartoum a centre of learning in East Africa.โ
He said the UK must take the lead in trying to bring stability to the country. โSudan is not a distant tragedy; it is a test of whether Britain still has the will, and the wisdom, to lead.
โFail that test, and our migration challenge here will only grow.โ
El Fasher, the last major city in the countryโs western Darfur region, was seized by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) this week, leading to reports of ethnically-targeted killings, sexual violence and starvation.
Some 260,000 people, half of them children, are now said to be trapped in the city.
The RSF has been waging a civil war against the Sudanese government since 2023 and has been accused of multiple human rights violations over the course of the conflict.
Ms Cooper warned women and children were โbearing the brunt of the largest humanitarian crisis in the 21st centuryโ.
The UK will provide ยฃ5 million for emergency food supplies and medical care, with ยฃ2 million focused on supporting survivors of sexual violence, she said.
Speaking at a conference in Bahrain, the Foreign Secretary joined with her counterparts from Germany and Jordan in calling for an immediate ceasefire.
Ms Cooper said: โIn Sudan right now, there is just despair.
โAnd just as the combination of leadership and international co-operation has made progress on Gaza, it is currently failing to deal with the humanitarian crisis and the devastating conflict in Sudan.โ
Last year, the UK sanctioned a number of companies linked to both the RSF and the Sudanese Armed Forces in an attempt to bring about a negotiated end to the war.
On Thursday, Foreign Office minister Stephen Doughty declined to comment on future sanctions, but said they would be kept โunder reviewโ.
He also acknowledged reports that โUK-made itemsโ had been found in Sudan, but said there was no evidence of British weapons or ammunition being used in the country in breach of an arms embargo.
