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Darfur relief operation may collapse because of insecurity – UN

United Nations Country Team in Sudan

Sudan: Joint statement on Darfur

Jan 17, 2007 — Over the last two years the efforts of humanitarian agencies in Darfur have saved the lives of hundreds of thousands of civilians caught up in the region’s conflict. During this time mortality rates were brought below emergency levels, global malnutrition was halved from the height of the crisis in mid-2004 and nearly three-quarters of all Darfurians now have access to safe drinking water. In 2006 alone, 400,000 metric tons of food were delivered. In the face of growing insecurity and danger to communities and aid workers, the UN and its humanitarian partners have effectively been holding the line for the survival and protection of millions.

That line cannot be held much longer. Access to people in need in December 2006 was the worst since April 2004. The repeated military attacks, shifting frontlines, and fragmentation of armed groups compromise safe humanitarian access and further victimize civilians who have borne the brunt of this protracted conflict. In the last six months alone, more than 250,000 people have been displaced by fighting, many of them fleeing for the second or third time. Villages have been burnt, looted and arbitrarily bombed and crops and livestock destroyed. Sexual violence against women is occurring at alarming rates. This situation is unacceptable.

Nor can we accept the violence increasingly directed against humanitarian workers. Twelve relief workers have been killed in the past six months – more than in the previous two years combined. Their loss has had direct consequences on the Darfur humanitarian operations. The killing of three government water engineers in West Darfur in July 2006 led to a temporary suspension of water and sanitation activities in camps for IDPs. Nine workers from the same Government department were abducted in South Darfur in November 2006 – five are still missing.

In the last six months, 30 NGO and UN compounds were directly attacked by armed groups. More than 400 humanitarian workers have been forced to relocate 31 times from different locations throughout the three Darfur states, including from the capitals El Fasher and El Geneina and from rebel-controlled areas. Assets have been looted and staff threatened and physically harassed. In the town of Gereida (South Darfur), targeted attacks against six humanitarian compounds on 18 December forced the NGO staff to withdraw, seriously compromising the delivery of vital assistance such as food, clean water and health care for 130,000 displaced persons, the largest IDP gathering in all Darfur. Ten days earlier, in the town of Kutum (North Darfur), the staff of four NGOs and WFP were forced to withdraw to El Fasher, after an attack on a clearly marked humanitarian compound. These are but two examples of the types of incidents which have taken place throughout Darfur.

If this situation continues, the humanitarian operation and welfare of the population it aims to support will be irreversibly jeopardised. Ongoing insecurity negatively affects access to health care for the population of Darfur, as many NGOs providing primary health care have had to suspend or minimize their activities. This reduction in services is leading to a deterioration of the hygiene in IDP camps, reflected by the cholera outbreak that struck 2,768 and killed 147 people during 2006. Global malnutrition rates are edging perilously close to the emergency threshold, while some 60 percent of households in need of food aid cite insecurity as the main barrier to cultivating their land, raising livestock and taking part in other income-generating activities.

The humanitarian community cannot indefinitely assure the survival of the population in Darfur if insecurity continues. The undersigned members of the United Nations Country Team in Sudan welcome concrete steps from both the signatories, including the Government, and the non-signatories to the Darfur Peace Agreement towards a peaceful settlement in Darfur and the respect of international humanitarian law and principles.

However, such progress must be sustained. Solid guarantees for the safety of civilians and humanitarian workers is urgently needed. At the same time, those who have committed attacks, harassment, abduction, intimidation, robbery and injury to civilians, including IDPs, humanitarian workers and other non-combatants, must be held accountable. If not, the UN humanitarian agencies and NGOs will not be able to hold the fragile line that to date has provided relief and a measure of protection to some four million people in Darfur affected by this tragic conflict.

This statement has been endorsed by the following members of the UN Country Team in Sudan:

– International Organisation for Migration (IOM)
– Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
– United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF)
– United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
– United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM)
– United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
– United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
– United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO)
– United Nations Joint Logistics Centre (UNJLC) United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS)
– United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS)
– United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)
– World Food Programme (WFP)
– World Health Organisation (WHO)

For more information contact: OCHA/UN Humanitarian Coordinator’s Office: Ms. Dawn Elizabeth Blalock, +249-912-174-454 or [email protected]


Facts and figures

Affects of violence on Humanitarian Operations and Civilians

– * A total of 430 humanitarians were relocated during the month of December in 13 relocations from all three states of Darfur:
– 1. Kulbus, Sileia and Abu Sarouj (WD) as a precautionary measure on 03 December
– 2. El Fasher (ND) as a precautionary measure on 05 December
– 3. Kutum (ND) following direct attack on humanitarian compound on 08 December
– 4. Kutum (ND) due to general insecurity following above attack on 09 December
– 5. Khor Abeche (SD) following direct attack on humanitarian compound on 08 December
– 6. Ed Daein (SD) as a precautionary measure on 09 December
– 7. Shangli Tobayi (ND) as a precautionary measure on 11 December
– 8. Deribat (SD) as a precautionary measure on 12 December
– 9. Sileia (WD)as a precautionary measure on 14 December
– 10. Geneina (WD) as a precautionary measure on 17 December
– 11. Gereida (SD) following direct attacks on humanitarian compounds on 19 December
– 12. Sileia (WD) as a precautionary measure on 21 December
– 13. Kulbus (WD) following direct attack on humanitarian vehicle on 21 December

– * 29 humanitarian vehicles were been hijacked during the month of December. Eighty-two vehicles have been hijacked since the signing of the DPA and 118 vehicles have been hijacked since January 2006.
– * One of the most violent attacks on a humanitarian convoy occurred on 9 December in West Darfur a commercial truck carrying relief supplies was attacked using rocket propelled grenades. Almost 30 civilians were massacred.
– * On December 18 an NGO ambulance ferrying critical patient between Mornei and Geneina was ambushed killing two of the police escorts, and wounding another as well as an NGO nurse, forcing the NGO to suspend services.
– * More relief workers have been killed in the past six months (12 between July and September) than in the previous two years combined.
– * Nine government water engineers workers from the Government department were abducted in South Darfur in November 2006 – five are still missing.
– * Regular, humanitarian access has hit a new low point, deteriorating to a level worse than 2004 while the number of people reliant on life-saving assistance has more than doubled.
– * Nearly a quarter of a million have been displaced since the signing of the DPA. There are now two million IDPs in Darfur.
– * It is still a massive operation: more than 13,000 international and national staff are currently deployed in Darfur.
– * Only one NGO has left Darfur in the past two years (because they were ordered out by authorities).
– * Global malnutrition was halved from nearly 22 per cent at the height of the crisis in mid-2004. It was just over 13 per cent in 2006.
– * Crude mortality rates have decreased to 0.36 per 10,000 per day, well below the emergency threshold of 1 per 10,000. However, these gains are under serious threat as insecurity increases and access declines

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