We have a problem with our attention span. In the age of the algorithm, global empathy feels like a spotlight that can only shine on one stage at a time. When it shines on Gaza, Sudan disappears in the shadows. When it flickers to the Congo, we forget the West Bank. It is upon us to keep delivering updates on Gaza, Sudan, and Congo.
But right now, as we close out 2025, we are not facing isolated tragedies. We are facing a Triple Crisis—three distinct, catastrophic failures of humanity happening simultaneously.
While you are scrolling through holiday sales and end-of-year recaps, here is the reality on the ground in the three most dangerous places on Earth this week. Do check our previous blog on this.
1. Updates on Gaza: The “Yellow Line” and the 7-Year Rubble
The “ceasefire” narrative in Washington is crumbling against the cold, hard reality of the Gaza winter.
- The “Yellow Line” Trap: This is the new nightmare. Israeli forces have established a shifting buffer zone—the so-called “Yellow Line”—marked by cement blocks. In the last week alone, these blocks have been moved, forcing thousands of families in At-Tuffah and Ash-Shuja’iyyeh to pack up their soaking wet tents and move again.
- The Winter Flood: “Storm Byron” hit the strip this week. In the camps of Al-Mawasi, where sewage infrastructure is non-existent, the rain didn’t just bring cold; it brought disease. UNICEF reported just days ago that 9,300 children were treated for acute malnutrition in October alone. These children are now sleeping in mud.
- The 7-Year Wait: A new UN report delivered a crushing statistic this month: The amount of debris in Gaza is so massive—over 42 million tonnes—that even with maximum effort, it will take seven years just to clear the rubble. Reconstruction hasn’t even begun; we are still just trying to see the floor.
2. Congo (DRC): The Silent Surge in South Kivu
While the world watches the Middle East, a regional war has exploded in Central Africa. Since December 2nd, the M23 rebel group has launched a terrifying new offensive in South Kivu, a region that was relatively stable until now.
- The Numbers: In just ten days, 200,000 people have been forced to flee their homes.
- The Resource Curse: Let’s be clear why this is happening. This isn’t just “tribal violence.” The towns being attacked—Uvira and Kamanyola—are strategic points in the mineral supply chain. The M23, backed by sophisticated weaponry, is carving out a state-within-a-state to control the minerals that power our smartphones.
- The Warning: The UN Secretary-General explicitly warned yesterday of a “regional conflagration.” This creates a direct risk of war between the DRC and Rwanda, yet it barely makes the ticker on the nightly news.
3. Sudan: The World’s Largest Camp
If Gaza is the most intense war, Sudan is the biggest. It remains the world’s largest displacement crisis, with 11.7 million people driven from their homes.
- The Fall of El Fasher: The city of El Fasher, the last stronghold of the Sudanese army in Darfur, has effectively fallen to the RSF after an 18-month siege. The stories emerging from the city are apocalyptic—mass executions, widespread sexual violence, and total looting.
- Famine Confirmed: We aren’t talking about “risk” anymore. Famine (IPC Phase 5) has been officially confirmed in the Zamzam camp near El Fasher. People are eating leaves and dirt to survive.
- The Chad Border: Over 1.2 million people have now crossed into Chad, a country that is itself struggling with poverty. They are arriving with bullet wounds and stories of ethnic cleansing that mirror the darkest days of 2003.
Conclusion: We Must Multi-Task Our Empathy
It is exhausting to care about everything, everywhere, all at once. But the victims of El Fasher do not suffer less because we are busy worrying about Khan Younis. The families fleeing Uvira in the Congo do not bleed differently than the families in Jenin.
The “Triple Crisis” proves that the international system is broken. It cannot handle three genocides at once. But we, as witnesses, must refuse to let the darkness hide any of them.
Don’t look away. Not from any of it.

