Shocking are the descriptions of the Greek survivors from the hell of Sudan who succeeded and arrived safely in Greece.

Thodoris Panagiotou describes in detail exclusively on SKAI the nightmare he and his family lived in Khartoum. At the same time, his father is one of the wounded who is fighting for his life and is hospitalized in the ICU after a bomb exploded nearby.

“As they come back a bomb fell, which when it explodes, irons are released. He hit the father in the legs, in the stomach, in the teeth and in the eye,” describes Thodoris Panagiotou to SKAI and continues: “We hear tanks and rebels gathering over here and blows. Dad and Mr. Markos get out of here and come to the church to tell the people to leave and the priests to stop the service. Mr. Marcos was a little further from the bomb. He hit both of his legs. I was at home. I went out, I saw them both lying down, bleeding. I pulled them both into the house. I left them over there. And then we sit for 1.5 hours calling the phones for the doctors to come. Someone come help us. Then a doctor came and took us to Fidel’s hospital. We sat there five days and could not operate because they had no blades. He closed the hospital because they had nothing. No medicine, no water. An ambulance was brought to us by force and we went to Mr. Markos’ house, which is in Khartoum. The problems started over there now. They wanted to take the airport too. The rebels and the army. They started knocking, knocking, knocking. When they knocked, the whole house shook and there was no electricity. We didn’t want to turn on the electricity, because the rebels hear and enter the house and kill you and they steal you. As soon as I hear a boom I wake up immediately” ends up.

Messarat Panagiotouthe wife of the wounded Greek who also managed to reach Greece describes in her turn the hell they experienced. “From the first day my husband was hit and we were all locked inside and couldn’t get out. He had neither water nor food. It was very difficult. I’m very afraid. I haven’t seen him in 14 days. Tomorrow we want to go see him.”

The youngest son of the family shocks by saying how they were constantly marked by snipers.“Our whole place had snipers. As soon as you go outside you hear a thud and you also hear the planes dropping bombs close to us.”

He also describes the nightmare he lived through Harris Dufa, a teacher in Khartoum that arrived in our country. “We were trapped for 11 days, we were right in the center of Khartoum and unfortunately there was no room for anyone to come and get us. The food was running out. We already drank the water from the non-drinkable tap. We were sent a van on the last day by some locals to escape the roadblocks. We made our cross and now we say let’s go.”