• Text size Normal size text | Increase text size by 10% | Increase text size by 20% | Increase text size by 30%
  • Also available in French

UNHCR launches appeal for internally displaced Sudanese and Chadian refugees in West Darfur

Briefing Notes, 30 January 2007

This is a summary of what was said by UNHCR spokesperson Jennifer Pagonis to whom quoted text may be attributed at the press briefing, on 30 January 2007, at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.

UNHCR is launching a $US 19.7 million appeal to fund our protection and assistance activities in 2007 for tens of thousands of internally displaced Sudanese as well as Chadian refugees in West Darfur.

The appeal notes that despite the signing of the Darfur Peace Agreement (DPA) in May 2006 and UN Security Council Resolution 1706 in August, the security situation in the region remains extremely volatile.

With constant fighting between government troops and rebels opposed to the DPA, as well as regular attacks by Arab militia on African tribes, there is no prospect of return for internally displaced people in Darfur, nor for the more than 200,000 Sudanese refugees hosted in eastern Chad. There are presently an estimated 2 million displaced persons in north, south and west Darfur, including 250,000 who have fled fighting in the past six months. In West Darfur alone, where UNHCR's teams are mainly based, there are an estimated 700,000 displaced.

There are also 20,000 Chadian refugees who have fled to Darfur following insecurity in border areas of their homeland over the past year. Eastern Chad hosts 230,000 Sudanese refugees from Darfur in 12 UNHCR camps. They fled Arab militia raids as well as fighting between governmental forces and rebel forces in 2003 and 2004.

The appeal notes that the region is characterised by a continuing state of emergency. The ongoing conflict and prevailing insecurity in Darfur are the main challenges for internally displaced persons and refugees as well as for all humanitarian actors. Aid workers have been the targets of organized attacks. In the past months, 12 of them have been killed in Darfur. Humanitarian compounds and possessions have also been targeted. As a result, attacks or fear of attacks seriously reduces access for aid workers to the people the most in need.

Despite the extremely precarious security conditions in Darfur, UNHCR remains committed to assisting the displaced and refugees in the region. In 2006, UNHCR conducted regular protection monitoring missions in those villages where access was possible. Our teams have also been directly involved in the prevention of and response to sexual and gender-based violence, especially through 34 UNHCR centres for women. The centres are located in IDP camps. The centres have so far helped 80,000 women to improve their living conditions through vocational training, income-generation projects and health education.

UNHCR has also provided legal aid to several hundred individuals who required representation and counselling. We also rehabilitated or built schools, sanitation facilities, water systems and shelter. In 2007, UNHCR plans to continue all of these crucial activities for internally displaced people.

The appeal also notes that in 2006, UNHCR established two refugee camps in West Darfur to assist some of the 20,000 Chadian refugees who fled insecurity in their country. Um Shalaya camp, near Mornei, hosts 3,800 Chadian refugees who were transferred from the border, while the camp in Mukjar accommodates 200 refugees. Thousands of Chadians decided to remain at the border, within a close range of their farms and families in eastern Chad. We will continue to ensure international protection and to provide assistance to the Chadian refugees in Darfur.

Insecurity in neighbouring Chad also pushed some 15,000 Sudanese refugees to come back to Darfur in 2005-06. Our teams will assist them in order to ensure their return is sustainable.

UNHCR is present in five locations in West Darfur: El Geneina, Zalingei, Mukjar, Habilla and Mornei. We also have an office in Nyala, in south Darfur. In total, we have more than 100 staff working in Darfur.

In Chad, meanwhile, UNHCR and its NGO partner MSF-Holland on Sunday completed an emergency distribution of relief supplies to more than 11,000 Chadians displaced in recent weeks by inter-communal violence in the south-eastern region. A total of 11,831 people received plastic sheeting, blankets, jerry cans and mats. These Chadian displaced people are located in and around the village of Gasire, several kilometres north of Goz Beida, the main town in south-eastern Chad.

Most of these people fled with nothing when some 25 villages were burned to the ground by armed Arab militia at the end of last year. Others fled anticipating violence in their villages. Sunday's distribution was made possible in large part by a major contribution from the US Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA) that was delivered directly by aircraft to Abéché, the main town in eastern Chad, last Saturday. The distribution was done in parallel with a food distribution by the World Food Programme and partners.

The situation throughout south-eastern Chad remains precarious, and we continue to be deeply concerned over long-term stability in the region. Chadians still live in daily fear of attacks, and some who had returned to their villages following pledges of increased security have reportedly returned to IDP sites because of continuing violence.

In addition, the region has a very fragile environment with scare natural resources particularly water and firewood. The additional pressure caused by tens of thousands of additional people fleeing insecurity poses a very real risk of depleting those resources.

More than 100,000 Chadians remain internally displaced in south-eastern Chad due to the unrelenting inter-communal violence. In addition to 230,000 refugees in UNHCR's 12 camps in the east of Chad, there are also 46,000 refugees from the Central African Republic in the south of the country.

• DONATE NOW • • GET INVOLVED • • STAY INFORMED •

 

UNHCR country pages

Crisis in the Central African Republic

Little has been reported about the humanitarian crisis in the northern part of the Central African Republic (CAR), where at least 295,000 people have been forced out of their homes since mid-2005. An estimated 197,000 are internally displaced, while 98,000 have fled to Chad, Cameroon or Sudan. They are the victims of fighting between rebel groups and government forces.

Many of the internally displaced live in the bush close to their villages. They build shelters from hay, grow vegetables and even start bush schools for their children. But access to clean water and health care remains a huge problem. Many children suffer from diarrhoea and malaria but their parents are too scared to take them to hospitals or clinics for treatment.

Cattle herders in northern CAR are menaced by the zaraguina, bandits who kidnap children for ransom. The villagers must sell off their livestock to pay.

Posted on 21 February 2008

Crisis in the Central African Republic

Battling the Elements in Chad

More than 180,000 Sudanese refugees have fled violence in Sudan's Darfur region, crossing the border to the remote desert of eastern Chad.

It is one of the most inhospitable environments UNHCR has ever had to work in. Vast distances, extremely poor road conditions, scorching daytime temperatures, sandstorms, the scarcity of vegetation and firewood, and severe shortages of drinkable water have been major challenges since the beginning of the operation. Now, heavy seasonal rains are falling, cutting off the few usable roads, flooding areas where refugees had set up makeshift shelters, and delaying the delivery of relief supplies.

Despite the enormous environmental challenges, UNHCR has so far managed to establish nine camps and relocate the vast majority of the refugees who are willing to move from the volatile border.

Battling the Elements in Chad

Southerners on the move before Sudanese vote

Ahead of South Sudan's landmark January 9, 2011 referendum on independence, tens of thousands of southern Sudanese in the North packed their belongings and made the long trek south. UNHCR set up way stations at key points along the route to provide food and shelter to the travellers during their arduous journey. Several reports of rapes and attacks on travellers reinforced the need for these reception centres, where women, children and people living with disabilities can spend the night. UNHCR has made contingency plans in the event of mass displacement after the vote, including the stockpiling of shelter and basic provisions for up to 50,000 people.

Southerners on the move before Sudanese vote

Sudan: A Perilous RoutePlay video

Sudan: A Perilous Route

Kassala camp in eastern Sudan provides shelter to thousands of refugees from Eritrea. Many of them pass through the hands of ruthless and dangerous smugglers.
Sudan: Heading for a New HomePlay video

Sudan: Heading for a New Home

UNHCR is offering to help move hundreds of people from Sudan to newly independent South Sudan, where they will build new lives. Almost 250 families with ties to the south are waiting for a ride.
South Sudan: Blue Nile RefugeesPlay video

South Sudan: Blue Nile Refugees

Refugees are streaming in from Sudan's Blue Nile Region into South Sudan, many to Doro Camp.