January 6 – Sudan and the United States sign the
Abraham Accords opening a path to normalization of Sudanese-Israeli relations and settling the debt with the
World Bank.[2]
January 17 – The death toll in weekend fighting goes to 130 in
West Darfur and dozens in
South Darfur. At least 50,000 people are displaced.[5]
January 19 – Tensions rise along the
border between Sudan and Ethiopia days after Sudan accused Ethiopia of violating its airspace.[6] South Sudan has offered to mediate.[7]
January 20 – No injuries or damage reported in an attack on Governor Mohammed Abdalla al-Douma's residence in
Geneina, West Darfur.[8]
January 24 – Police fire
tear gas at dozens of people protesting about the economy in
Khartoum; similar protests were held in
Omdurman. Inflation reached 269% in December and Sudan has a debt of USD $60 billion. The
Export–Import Bank of the United States recently gave Sudan a $1 billion loan.[9]
January (date unknown) – Islamist Sheikh Muhammed Al-Amin Ismail condemns The Creation of Adam by Italian Renaissance artist
Michelangelo, displayed in a history book, as “heresy and atheism”. The book has been withdrawn from the curriculum.[11]
February 21 – The central bank devalues Sudanese currency. The previous official rate was previous official rate of 55 pounds per U.S. dollar, and the new official rate is 375 pounds to the U.S. dollar.[14]
^Magdy, Samy (20 January 2021).
"Armed men try to storm governor's house in Sudan's Darfur".
The Associated Press. Retrieved January 21, 2021. There were no injuries or damage in the attempted attack on West Darfur Gov. Mohammed Abdalla al-Douma's residence in the provincial capital of Genena, but it underscored the heightened tensions in the restive region where a bout of tribal violence has killed around 230 people since last week.