Photo: Derk Segaar/IRIN. A decade of conflict
Source: IRIN
NAIROBI, 19 April 2013 (IRIN) - A recent spate of violence in Sudan’s
western region of Darfur has left tens of thousands displaced;
humanitarian agencies say they are struggling to access populations in
need of support.
An estimated 2.3 million people remain displaced by Darfur’s decade-long conflict.
A number of peace agreements - most recently the 2011 Doha Document for
Peace in Darfur - have failed to halt the intermittent clashes between
the government and rebel groups in the region. In early April,
fighting between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Sudan
Liberation Army-Minni Minawi (SLA-MM) in East Darfur State displaced
several thousand people; SLA-MM managed to capture took two towns -
Muhajiriya and Labado - for ten days, but the SAF has since retaken
them.
On 19 April, a peacekeeper was shot dead and two others were injured
when unknown assailants attacked an African Union-United Nations Hybrid
Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) base in Muhajiriya.
Inter-tribal violence has also broken out, with clashes between the
Misseriya and Salamat communities in early April causing displacement;
some fled across the border to Chad and the Central African Republic.
Land disputes between the same two communities in South Darfur have
caused tension and displacement.
In January, tens of thousands were displaced by
fighting between the Northern Reizegat and Beni Hussein ethnic groups
over control of gold mines in the Jebel Amir area of North Darfur State.
No access
According to the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre, more than 150,000 people were displaced by renewed violence in Darfur in the first three months of 2013.
“The ongoing war in Darfur continues to claim lives, and the longer it
goes on, the more civilians die, the more people are forced out of their
homes and the more people have their lives torn apart,” Mark Cutts,
country head of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (OCHA), told IRIN.
“Regarding the recent displacements, we are largely working without
accurate numbers, which makes it very difficult for us to plan for the
newly displaced populations… It's difficult to estimate the numbers and
the exact needs as long as we are unable to get people on the ground to
assess the situation,” he said.
“After the government retook the towns of Muhajiriya and Labado a couple
of days ago, UNAMID was able to send a convoy into the area. We
requested permission from the government to send a humanitarian convoy
with food and medical supplies along with them, but the government
rejected this request,” Cutts added. “We were told this was for security
reasons. We are hoping to have access to the displaced populations
soon.”
UNAMID has also called for better humanitarian access, specifically to Muhajiriya and Labado.
Ruari McDermott, country director for Mercy Corps and head of the
international NGO forum’s steering committee, told IRIN that a number of
NGOs had a presence in the field and were able to report on the
situation in some areas, but faced difficulty getting an overview of the
overall numbers and needs of the displaced.
Funding
“We have stocks to cope with the immediate needs and have access to
emergency response funds at the global and national level, but this
violence and displacement puts pressure on an already woefully
underfunded effort to care for 4.4 million people in Sudan,” Cutts said.
A donor conference in Doha, Qatar, recently raised US$3.6 billion for
development projects in Darfur. Cutts welcomed the injection of new
money into the region.
“Often, humanitarian agencies in emergencies take over the provision of
services such as water and medical care, which would ordinarily be
handled by the government... With more money coming into the region, the
government can rebuild these services and humanitarian partners can
focus on the most urgent needs of the crisis,” he said.