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UNHCR moves newly arrived Darfur refugees away from Chad-Sudan border

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UNHCR moves newly arrived Darfur refugees away from Chad-Sudan border

The UN refugee agency on Friday began moving the first of some 1,500 newly-arrived Darfur refugees away from the Sudanese border to a camp near the eastern Chad town of Guéréda. Meanwhile, more attacks and forced displacements are reported from villages in south-eastern Chad.
17 November 2006 Also available in:
A group of displaced Chadians shelter under a tree near Habile. As well as thousands of Chadians fleeing violence, refugees continue to arrive in Chad from Darfur.

ABECHE, Chad, November 17 (UNHCR) - The UN refugee agency on Friday began moving the first of some 1,500 newly-arrived Darfur refugees away from the Sudanese border to a camp near the eastern Chad town of Guéréda. These Darfurians fled an October 29 attack on Jebel Moon in West Darfur which left many dead and wounded, including two dozen children.

The transfer from the border will likely be done in two stages, UNHCR staff in Abéché said. About half of the refugees will be moved within the next few days. Then, after about a week, a second round of transfers will take place for refugees who have asked for additional time to wait for family members who have not yet arrived, or to try to return to their villages in an attempt to harvest as much as they can before returning to Chad.

Concerned that there may be combatants among the new arrivals, UNHCR has informed the refugees of the humanitarian and civilian character of its refugee camps. The agency also requested the refugees' assistance in identifying unaccompanied children before the transfer. It was also agreed with the refugees that vulnerable groups would be given priority for transport in the first convoy.

These new arrivals, who are of the Djabal ethnicity, are currently in the Seneit area. They will be registered and undergo a medical screening before being brought to their new homes in Kounoungou, one of 12 camps for some 218,000 Sudanese refugees in eastern Chad. Kounoungou camp - located near Guéréda - currently has some 13,000 people who fled hostilities in Darfur.

Meanwhile, UNHCR continues to receive reports of bloody attacks on villages in south-eastern Chad near the border with Darfur. On Wednesday, the village of Samassin, 15 kilometres south-west of Kerfi, was attacked. One villager was reportedly killed and several wounded. UNHCR has received reports of 23 villages being attacked since November 4, and at least 20 others that were abandoned by residents who feared attacks were imminent.

Since the latest round of violence began on November 4, UNHCR estimates at least 12,000 Chadians have fled their villages - about 7,000 of them are now gathered in Habile, near the town of Koukou. Habile already had some 3,500 displaced Chadians.

Another 5,000 recently-displaced Chadians are encamped on the outskirts of the town of Goz Beida, and many others are staying with relatives or friends in the town itself. Altogether, the refugee agency estimates some 75,000 Chadians have been forced to flee their villages over the past year - 12,000 of them since the latest series of attacks began.

Some of the internally displaced are trying to quickly get back to their villages to salvage grain and other belongings. But several of them have been attacked, killed or wounded in so doing. On several occasions, returnees have been seriously attacked or even killed upon return.

Information from survivors of the recent attacks south of Goz Beida show a pattern over the past 12 days in which villages were surrounded by armed men - some in military uniforms - on horses and camels. In some cases, the attackers also used rocket propelled grenades, witnesses said.

Villages have been burned to the ground and inhabitants gunned down while trying to flee. Survivors describe their attackers as Arab nomad tribes, both Chadians and Sudanese.

The testimonies are harrowing, including reports of babies, children, the elderly and infirm being burned alive in their houses because they were unable to flee. In one village, seven children were burned alive, according to residents. In another, a paralysed man was trapped in his home and burned to death. The survivors are in a state of shock.

In Goz Beida hospital, which is spilling over with wounded, three male patients, who said they tried to return to their fields near Koloi and Tamadjour, were attacked by Arabs who gouged out their eyes with bayonets.

Of the 218,000 refugees from Darfur in 12 UNHCR camps in eastern Chad, 15,000 are in Djabal camp and 18,000 in Goz Amir camp in the Goz Beida region. Chad is also hosting 46,000 refugees from the Central African Republic in the south.

By Matthew Conway in Abéché
and Hélène Caux in Goz Beida, Chad