How Did Rape Become a Weapon of War in Sudan with Rahmet Elfikhi - Fading Causes with Mukesh Kapila
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In this episode, Rahmet Elfikhi exposes one of the most brutal realities of Sudan’s war: rape not as a byproduct of conflict, but as a deliberate, systematic weapon.
Her documentary, Land of Victims, forces into the open what is often hidden behind statistics and diplomatic language—survivors’ voices. Women, men, and children recount acts of violence carried out with chilling normalcy, in a conflict where the human body has become a battlefield. These are not isolated crimes. They are patterns.
The conversation confronts uncomfortable truths. Why is sexual violence so pervasive in Sudan’s war? How do stigma and culture silence survivors while shielding perpetrators? And why have global institutions, designed to prevent such atrocities, repeatedly failed to act?
Elfikhi also reveals the cost of telling these stories—the fear, the ethical dilemmas, and the emotional toll of documenting trauma at close range. Yet, amid the horror, there is defiance. Survivors speak, often at great personal risk, refusing to be erased.