
A Sudan Airways flight touched down at Khartoum International Airport this Sunday, marking the first passenger arrival since war began.
The landing signals a fragile return to normalcy after nearly three years of brutal conflict scarred the capital city.
The airport once served as a jagged frontline where relentless fighting between General Abdel Fattah al Burhan’s army and Rapid Support Forces levelled infrastructure.
Recent renovations have breathed life back into the terminal, despite the lingering shadows of sporadic drone strikes and regional instability.
Approximately 1.4 million residents have returned to a landscape defined by hollowed homes, makeshift graves, and a resilient spirit.
While the engines hum once more, the nation still grapples with a displacement crisis that has uprooted eleven million people.




