Duchess Sophie recalls horrifying moment that left her ‘shuddering’ in rare letter
In a letter to The Telegraph, the Duchess of Edinburgh is warning the international community to pay attention to the atrocities happening in Sudan.

The Duchess Of Edinburgh has asked the world to pay attention to Sudan (Image: Getty)
The Duchess of Edinburgh has issued a powerful and deeply personal plea to the international community, breaking her silence on the “world’s most severe humanitarian crisis” in Sudan. Writing as conflict in the country reached a grim 1,000-day milestone on January 9, Sophie shared harrowing details of her visit to the Chadian border, where she witnessed the human cost of a war she fears the world is ignoring.
Reflecting on her time at the Adré transit camp, the Duchess described the “countless stream” of exhausted refugees fleeing the brutality of raging militias. She confessed that, in the calm of that moment, she “shuddered” to imagine the horrors these traumatised people had seen. While those who reached the camp were considered the “lucky ones”, their accounts were nonetheless shocking.

Sophie recounted hearing of children whose families were killed in “indescribable ways” and women forced to endure sexual exploitation just to secure basic food and water.
She wrote: “Their deeply personal and shocking accounts reflected the experiences of so many. Their eyes telling tales of horrors no one should ever see; bodies piled up like a wall, families drowned at gunpoint, children carved in two, women raped and beaten. Those who can escape, live in fear of being killed later.”
Sophie, a dedicated champion for the Women, Peace and Security agenda, warned that as the population of the border town of Adré has swelled from 40,000 to over 200,000, local groups and international agencies are now stretched to a breaking point.

The conflict in Sudan has displaced millions of people (Image: Getty)
Despite the darkness, the Duchess spoke of the “extraordinary strength” and “quiet leadership” she witnessed among Sudanese women who are now caring for children separated from their families.
Sophie argued that these women are central to the eventual rebuilding of their nation and called for a global commitment to restoring dignity through education and health services.
While the atrocities of the last 1,000 days cannot be undone, the Duchess concluded with a sobering reminder that the world still has the opportunity to shape what happens next. She urged for solidarity with those on the ground, insisting that the people of Sudan deserve to know the world has not forgotten them and that the pursuit of peace remains a possibility.