What We Do
We are on a mission to provide support for victims of violations of humanitarian provisions in the Darfur region due to armed conflict.
Bringing people together
to end human rights violations
1. Psychosocial Support
DarfurVS provides trauma-informed care, counseling, group support, & resilience programs for holistic post-conflict healing.
2. Seek Justice for Victims
DarfurVS seeks justice through documentation, legal advocacy, policy changes, reparations, truth, reconciliation, and international collaboration for war victims.
3. Accountability For Perpetrators
DarfurVS pursues accountability with legal aid, ICC engagement, witness protection, public awareness, & court support.
4. Capacity Building
DarfurVS empowers with trauma-informed training, conflict resolution, legal education, vocational skills, community engagement, & leadership development.
5. Civic Education
Civic education on governance, democracy, and constitutionalism is a vital component of the work carried out by DarfurVS empowering individuals and communities affected by war.
DarfurVS aids recovery with capacity building, community initiatives, & gender-inclusive approaches for sustainable livelihoods.
7. Climate Education
DarfurVS integrates climate education for disaster preparedness, renewable energy, climate-smart agriculture, justice advocacy, and peacebuilding synergy.
The idea to address human rights violations in Darfur emerged in 2010 while I was a student at Omdurman Islamic University. In collaboration with my friend Mr. Adam Abuker, we founded Darfur Victims Support in 2016, using Facebook as a platform to highlight the atrocities. The organization, now fully operational since August 14, 2023, is a non-profit, non-governmental entity registered in Alfasher office in Darja, North Darfur State, Sudan.
Adam Mousa
DarfurVS Co.Founder & CEO
Where We Work
7.5 Million people, in nearly 58 localities
DarfurVS supports people in Darfur, a diverse area divided into 5 states and … localities with over … population, … tribes, and … . The area faced war and tribal conflict since 2003.