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BBC News
By Reha Kansara
Published
image captionKhamisa Juma Ishag Abaker s home used to stand here, before her settlement was attacked
Two years after the Sudanese revolution, hundreds of thousands of people have been internally displaced as violence in Darfur continues. Many hoped a hard-earned peace agreement would put an end to the decades-old conflict, but the region s bloody legacy continues.
Thirty-five-year-old Khamisa Juma Ishag Abaker is perched on a pile of rubble that was once her home.
Dressed in a floral print fabric that covers her from head to toe, she sifts through the dust to uncover an old bottle of perfume and dinnerware gifted to her but now broken - remnants of her old life.
BBC News
The ongoing struggle for peace in Darfur
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Sudan s rulers have agreed to hand over ex-President Omar al-Bashir to the International Criminal Court (ICC) to face genocide and war crimes charges.
He is accused of serious crimes in a conflict that broke out in Darfur in 2003 and led to the deaths of 300,000.
The conflict between rebels and government forces killed hundreds of thousands and forced millions from their homes and into displacement camps.
The BBC s Mohanad Hashim is one of the first journalists to travel freely in the region in a decade. He visited the Kalma camp.