Showing posts with label IDPs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IDPs. Show all posts

Sunday, November 12, 2023

Sudan: Humanitarian Update (12 November 2023)

UN OCHA Humanitarian Update

Sunday, 12 November 2023

HIGHLIGHTS

• More than 6 million people have been displaced within and outside Sudan since mid-April 2023.
 

• A least 1.2 million people fled Sudan since mid-April seeking safety and protection in neighbouring countries.
 

• Sudan is now the largest child displacement crisis in the world, with 3 million children fleeing widespread violence.
 

• OHCHR raises concerns of women and girls being abducted, allegedly forcibly married and held for ransom.
 

• Sudan is one of the top four hotspots of highest concern for food insecurity according to the Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Food Programme.
 

• The revised 2023 Sudan Humanitarian Response Plan appeal is only 33.8 per cent funded as of 12 November.

Download Report(PDF | 1.04 MB)

Read full analysis: 

https://reports.unocha.org/en/country/sudan/card/4HzR95AMmV/

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Thursday, November 02, 2023

OCHA SUDAN: Humanitarian Update (2 Nov 2023)

ANALYSIS from OCHA
Sudan Humanitarian Update (2 November 2023)
SITUATION OVERVIEW

HIGHLIGHTS

• An estimated 5.8 million people have been displaced within and outside Sudan since mid-April 2023.
 

• A least 85,800 people fled Sudan over the past month seeking safety and protection in neighbouring countries.
 

• At least 17 people were killed and 17,500 people displaced due to renewed clashes between SAF and RSF in Nyala Town, South Darfur.
 

• Over 140 people were reportedly killed due to inter-communal fighting in As Sunta and Buram localities in South Darfur.
 

• Conflict has severely affected agriculture in many parts of the country raising concerns on food security in the coming months.
 

• The revised 2023 Sudan Humanitarian Response Plan appeal is only 33.6 per cent funded as of 2 November.

For previous humanitarian updates:

View full analysis and map: 

https://reports.unocha.org/en/country/sudan/card/1TLaNU0UWB

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Sudan: Humanitarian Key Messages (November 2023):


News and Press Release 

Source OCHA 

Posted 2 Nov 2023 

Originally published 2 Nov 2023

Download Report (PDF | 153.62 KB)

View original: https://reliefweb.int/report/sudan/sudan-humanitarian-key-messages-november-2023


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Wednesday, November 01, 2023

OCHA Sudan: Humanitarian Access Situation Report

TWENTY aid workers have been killed in Sudan this year. Violence against humanitarians and assets continues, including looting of aid trucks, offices and drivers that curtail the capacity of humanitarian organisations. More than 200 visas were pending for international staff in Aug and Sep. More:

Sudan Humanitarian Access Situation Report (August - September 2023)
Source OCHA via ReliefWeb
Dated Monday, 30 October 2023 - here is a copy of the report summary:


This report is produced by OCHA Sudan in collaboration with humanitarian partners. It covers the period from 1 August to 30 September 2023. The next report will be issued in November 2023.


HIGHLIGHTS

  • Since fighting erupted on 15 April, Sudan is experiencing a large-scale humanitarian crisis, with half the population – 24.7 million people in need of humanitarian aid and protection. Around 5.3 million people have been displaced within Sudan and to neighbouring countries.
  • Millions of people particularly in Khartoum, Darfur and Kordofan lack access to basic services, such as food, water, shelter, health, and education.
  • Reaching those in need in partially accessible and hard-to-reach areas, remains extremely difficult due to ongoing insecurity, and lack of commitment by the parties to the conflict to provide safe passage.
  • Relief operations through cross-border and across Sudan are scaling up.
  • Access and civil-military negotiations have led to a number of successful interventions, resulting in the delivery of 62,546 MT (1,381 trucks) of relief items in August and an additional 36,988 MT (840 trucks) in September targeting displaced communities. The planned movement of 786 MT (21 trucks) to Kordofan and Darfur states has been cancelled due to insecurity.
  • The cross-border response from Chad complements the in-country response in Sudan by providing additional assistance to people in need in Darfur. At the end of September, the movement of 47 trucks carrying a total of 1,217 metric tons of critical humanitarian supplies had been successfully facilitated.
  • However, a number of operational obstacles remain that impede a rapid scale-up of aid from reaching those in need, including: operating in Sudan poses a high risk, as seen through the 20 aid workers killed this year. Violence against humanitarian personnel and assets continues, including looting of aid trucks, offices and drivers that curtail the capacity of the humanitarian organizations.
  • Bureaucratic and administrative impediments (BAIs) prevent the UN and INGOs from delivering aid effectively to the affected population. BAIs impact hiring of international staff, deployment of technical teams, and delivering supplies into and across Sudan. More than 200 visas were pending for international staff in August and September.
  • Lack of funding is another impediment to the response. A total of US$2.6 billion is required to deliver lifesaving assistance and protection services to 18.1 million people this year. The Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP) is 31.7 per cent funded. Additional funds are urgently needed, including for the Sudan Humanitarian Fund (SHF), which supports national NGOs on the frontline of the response

Download Report
(PDF | 1.3 MB)


UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

To learn more about OCHA's activities, please visit https://www.unocha.org/.


View full report: https://reliefweb.int/report/sudan/sudan-humanitarian-access-situation-report-august-september-2023


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Thursday, June 15, 2023

Statement on Darfur Sudan by UN aid chief Griffiths

NOTE, in Sudan 1.7 million people are now internally displaced while close to half a million people have sought refuge outside Sudan. Hundreds of civilians have been killed and thousands have been injured. Read more: 

News and Press Release from OCHA 
Dated Thursday 15 June 2023 
Originally published 15 June 2023 - full copy:


Situation in Darfur spiralling into humanitarian calamity as Sudan conflict hits two-month mark 


Statement by Martin Griffiths, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator (15 June 2023)


(New York, 15 June 2023) As the conflict in Sudan enters its third month, the humanitarian situation across the country continues to deteriorate.


Some 1.7 million people are now internally displaced while close to half a million people have sought refuge outside Sudan. Hundreds of civilians have been killed and thousands have been injured. 


Looting of medical and humanitarian assets continues on a massive scale. Farmers are unable to reach their land, which further raises the risk of food insecurity. And there has been a spike in reports of gender-based violence.


I am particularly worried about conditions in Darfur where people are trapped in a living nightmare: 


Babies dying in hospitals where there were being treated; children and mothers suffering from severe malnutrition; camps for displaced persons burned to the ground; girls raped; schools closed; and families eating leaves to survive.


Hospitals and water facilities have come under attack. Humanitarian warehouses and offices have been ransacked. Aid workers have been killed.


Inter-communal violence is also spreading, threatening to reignite the ethnic tensions that stoked the deadly conflict there 20 years ago. Reports of ethnic killings which claimed the lives of hundreds of people in the besieged town of El Geneina alone, though unconfirmed, should spur the world into action.


Humanitarian partners, including local organizations, have been doing their utmost to deliver aid, replenish stocks of life-saving supplies such as food and medicine, and provide water and nutrition services. However, the violence is hampering their efforts.


Under the rules of war, and the Declaration of Commitments that they both signed, parties to the conflict must refrain from attacking civilians and civilian infrastructure and must take constant care to spare them throughout their military operations.


We urge the parties to allow those seeking to flee to do so safely and voluntarily.


We also urge them and those with influence to ensure the movement of humanitarian supplies and personnel from other parts of Sudan – and from neighbouring countries – to Darfur where close to 9 million people need assistance.


Darfur is rapidly spiralling into a humanitarian calamity. The world cannot allow this to happen. Not again.


MEDIA CONTACTS:

In New York: Eri Kaneko, kaneko@un.org, +1 917 208 8910 

In Geneva: Jens Laerke, laerke@un.org, +41 79 472 9750


Disclaimer

UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

To learn more about OCHA's activities, please visit https://www.unocha.org/.


View original: 

https://reliefweb.int/report/sudan/situation-darfur-spiraling-humanitarian-calamity-sudan-conflict-hits-two-month-mark-statement-martin-griffiths-under-secretary-general-humanitarian-affairs-and-emergency-relief-coordinator-15-june-2023


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UN: Sudan conflict displaced more than 2 million

Report at Radio Pakistan - https://www.radio.gov.pk/

Dated Thursday 15 June 2023 - full copy:


Sudan’s raging war forces over two million from their homes


In Sudan, fighting has again intensified in and around the capital Khartoum as the governor of West Darfur has been assassinated.


Governor Khamis Abakar was abducted by gunmen after a TV interview in which he accused the paramilitary fighters of genocide and called for international intervention.


The United Nations said the conflict has so far displaced more than 2 million people and escalating attacks in Darfur could amount to crimes against humanity.


View original: https://www.radio.gov.pk/15-06-2023/sudans-raging-war-forces-over-two-million-from-their-homes


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___________________________________


Analysis at UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)

Last updated: Tuesday 13 June 2023 - excerpts:


Sudan Situation Report - Situation Overview


Conflict-related sexual violence is a major concern. Since the fighting began, civil society organizations have reported increasing cases of gender-based violence in particular sexual violence and kidnappings targeting women and girls. Due to sensitivities and fear of reprisals including against survivors and service providers, many cases have not been formally reported, with the priority focus being on the provision of emergency care, protection and support to victims/survivors. While OHCHR continued to receive reports, the numbers are expected to be much higher. 


Nearly 1.9 million people have been fled to safer locations inside and outside the country since the conflict began on 15 April. Over 1.4 million are internally displaced within Sudan, according to the International Organization for Migration’s Displacement Tracking Matrix as of 6 June. Most of the internally displaced people have taken refuge in West Darfur (19 per cent), White Nile (15 per cent), River Nile (13 per cent) and Northern states (13 per cent). They originally displaced from six states, including Khartoum (66 per cent), West Darfur (19 per cent), South Darfur (7 per cent), Central Darfur (6 per cent), North Darfur (2 per cent) and North Kordofan (0.2 per cent). Before the crisis, Sudan had already approximately 3.8 million displaced people, the majority of whom (an estimated 79 per cent) were based in Darfur and in severe need of humanitarian assistance. In addition, 460,000 people, including refugees, asylum seekers and returnees, have crossed into neighbouring countries, including Central African Republic, Chad, Egypt, Ethiopia and South Sudan, according to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) as of 8 June.


View original: https://reports.unocha.org/en/country/sudan/


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UPDATE & POSTSCRIPT from Sudan Watch Editor: Each post at this site has tags. Instead of clicking on a tag, type a tag into the Search Sudan Watch box in top right sidebar of this site to see archived posts. For example, see water tag here below, go to the search box and type water.

Monday, May 29, 2023

Troika & EU support AU Resolution on Sudan conflict

THE only hope now for people of Sudan and South Sudan to live in peace and flourish is that all Africans, Arabs and their friends across the world join hands in friendship to give peace a chance. A tall order but not impossible.


This report says the international community has reaffirmed its support for the African Union's Roadmap for the Resolution of the Conflict in Sudan.


Report at The Star - the-star.co.ke

By SHARON MWENDE 

Dated Monday 29 May 2023; 17:17 - full copy:


ROADMAP

Troika, European Union support AU's resolution on Sudan conflict


They also agreed with the condemnation of the ongoing crisis of the two warring parties


In Summary


During the meeting, the AU adopted a Roadmap for the Resolution of the Conflict which includes silencing guns in Sudan.


It called on Sudanese stakeholders and the international community to support the implementation of the Roadmap.

EU flag .Image: FILE


The International Community has reaffirmed its support for the African Union's Roadmap for the Resolution of the Conflict in Sudan.


In a statement released by the US Department of State on Monday [May 29], Spokesperson Matthew Miller welcomed the decision to ensure coordinated action in the peace process. 


The community includes Norway, the United Kingdom, the United States of America and the European Union (the Troika plus EU).


"The Troika plus EU reaffirms its support for African leadership and the AU's Roadmap for the Resolution of the Conflict in Sudan, and welcomes the AU’s work to establish an Expanded Mechanism and its Core Group to ensure inclusively and coordinated regional and international action to secure a viable peace process, and the resumption of the transition to civilian government and democracy in Sudan," it said.


The statement comes after the AU held a Heads of State and government Peace and Security Council meeting on the situation in Sudan on Saturday, May 27.


During the meeting, the AU adopted a Roadmap for the Resolution of the Conflict which includes silencing guns in Sudan.


It called on Sudanese stakeholders and the international community to support the implementation of the Roadmap.


The leaders reaffirmed six elements which are outlined in the Roadmap including the establishment of a coordination mechanism to ensure all efforts by the regional and global actors are harmonised and impactful,  an immediate, permanent, inclusive and comprehensive cessation of hostilities.


Others are effective humanitarian response, protection of civilians and civil infrastructure, strategic role of neighboring states and the region and resumption of a credible and inclusive political transition process, that takes into account the contributory role of all Sudanese political and social actors, as well as the signatories to the Juba Peace Agreement, towards a democratic civilian-led government.


The Expanded Mechanism on Sudan and its Core Group is an all-inclusive platform of regional, continental and global actors and institutions.


It aims to provide broad-based and coordinated engagement within the international community, to foster political consensus and common global support for Sudan.


The Core Group stresses the need for the AU to continue to effectively coordinate the activities of the Expanded Mechanism on the conflict in Sudan.


Further, the leaders condemned the ongoing conflict between the Sudan Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces, terming it as "senseless" and "unjustified."


AU chairperson Moussa Faki Mahamat demanded an immediate ceasefire without preconditions. 


He said this was going to facilitate the delivery of humanitarian assistance to Sudanese in dire need.


He urged the international community to extend humanitarian aid to the persons fleeing the war in Sudan.


Troika and EU further welcomed the chairperson's demand for conflict cessation.


"We agree with the AU’s condemnation of the actions of the two warring parties and the suffering they have caused the people of Sudan," Miller said.


The ongoing conflict has led to the loss of more than 822 lives and more than 3,000 wounded.


It has also resulted in the displacement of persons and the destruction of infrastructure.


View original:  https://www.the-star.co.ke/news/2023-05-29-troika-european-union-support-aus-resolution-on-sudan-conflict/


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Sunday, May 28, 2023

Gunfire adds to violations near end of Sudan truce

IN SIX WEEKS of urban warfare, more than 1,800 people have been killed, according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project.

Nearly 1.4 million people have been displaced both within Sudan and to neighbouring countries, according to the United Nations.


A record 25 million people, more than half the population, are now in need of humanitarian assistance to survive, according to the UN.

Read more in report by AFP dated Sunday 28 May 2023:

Gunfire adds to violations near end of breached Sudan truce

A looted petrol station in southern Khartoum. (AFP)

The exodus continues -- people flee with their belongings from Khartoum's twin city of Omdurman. (AFP)


The truce has allowed some to venture out, including this man and boy in Omdurman. (AFP)


Full story: https://www.modernghana.com/news/1233858/gunfire-adds-to-violations-near-end-of-breached.html


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Sunday, May 21, 2023

60,000 Sudanese have crossed into Chad. As villages in Darfur empty, villages in eastern Chad are filling up

NOTE from Sudan Watch Ed: Beige highlight is mine for future reference and to show: a woman with 5 children fled from Sudan to Chad in March; a Chadian official allegedly said Darfur war is just starting; ninety percent of the displaced seem to be children and women; they use westerners' lingo.


At height of Darfur war, usually before rainy season when rebels regrouped and splintered (I stopped counting after 40 groups, identifying them was like trying to nail mercury to a wall) women and children fled to be cared for by humanitarian aid. Rebels looted aid trucks to get the supplies they needed.


Going by what I can gather, people from all walks of life knew weeks before April 15 that fighting would start that week. What were the diplomats and politicians in Sudan doing? It's hard to believe there were no intelligence warnings. The fight for Khartoum was lightning fast and well orchestrated. 


The US embassy in Khartoum alone has 70 staff. People acted surprised. It seems what we're being told doesn't add up. I saw a report about Egyptian soldiers on exercises in Sudan being caught April 13 and Burhan and Hemeti falling out over it. I saw it on video which is why I don't have report to hand.


Also during the fast-moving news at that time I glimpsed news of possible war between Sudan and Ethiopia. I've not had time to reprint those reports here for posterity nor much about Bashir & Co being sprung from prison.


The well-planned fight for Khartoum that erupted April 15 seemed different to previous chaotic coups and rebellions. If, as is reported, Sudan has no functioning government why hasn't a state of emergency been declared? 


It's easy to remember how much Russia needs and appreciates Sudan's gold in order to keep up its war on Ukraine. And that Hemeti agreed to Russia leasing a port in Port Sudan where China has a port too. 


What's China's stance, I wonder. A report HERE recently suggests it's standing back. Next postXi sends congratulations to Arab League meeting.

___________________________


Report from The New York Times


By Elian Peltier - Photographs by Yagazie Emezi


Elian Peltier and Yagazie Emezi visited refugee sites on Chad’s Sudan border, where tens of thousands of people have found refuge since a war started in Sudan last month.


Dated Tuesday 16 May 2023, 3:29 p.m. ET - full copy:


Fleeing Generals at War and Violent Militias, Many Say 'We're Not Coming Back'


The war in Sudan has unleashed a new wave of violence in the western region of Darfur, sending tens of thousands into neighbouring Chad, where a new humanitarian crisis is looming.

An estimated 60,000 Sudanese refugees have crossed into neighbouring Chad since the beginning of the war in Sudan in April. More than 90 percent of them are children and women. 


Thousands of Sudanese refugees watched as the first emergency aid workers reached a village in Chad, days after escaping from their embattled country. Mothers tended to toddlers, while men listed their most urgent needs — water, vaccines, tarps for the looming rainy season.


The fighting that erupted in Sudan’s capital last month has ricocheted far beyond the city’s borders, worsening instability in the restive western region of Darfur and sending tens of thousands of people fleeing to neighboring countries, including Chad in Central Africa.


As villages in western Sudan empty, villages in eastern Chad are filling up: Camps have sprouted up, sometimes in days, with thousands of tents made of colourful sheets mounted on branches, forming a fragile patchwork of uncertainty.

IMAGE by The New York Times, map of Darfur Region, Sudan


The surging conflict in Darfur is the latest ordeal for a region that has been traumatized by two decades of [SW Ed: alleged] genocidal violence. It has also deepened a humanitarian crisis in Chad, where hundreds of thousands of people displaced from Darfur had already taken refuge.


The United Nations’ Refugee Agency said last week that 60,000 Sudanese had crossed into Chad since the start of the conflict — doubling an earlier assessment, with 25,000 refugees recently registered in the Chadian village of Borota alone. Most had fled Kango Haraza, a village on the other side of the border, in Darfur.

Aid workers from the United Nations’ Refugee Agency registering families in the Chadian village of Borota, a few miles from the Sudanese border.


Two New York Times journalists accompanied the U.N. agency last week into Borota, where tens of thousands of refugees have been without food, water and other essential items.


With Sudan’s most powerful groups, the army and the R.S.F., fighting for control in the capital, Khartoum, the unstable situation in Darfur has spiralled into further violence.


Militias, made up mostly of Arab fighters, have exploited the power vacuum to rampage through cities, loot households and kill an unknown number of civilians, according to aid workers, doctors and local activists. In response, some civilians  have begun arming themselves, and non-Arab groups have also retaliated against militias at a small scale.


Along with Khartoum and the two adjoining cities across the Nile, cities in Darfur have been the most affected by the fighting between the Sudanese Army and a paramilitary group known as the Rapid Support Forces. Hospitals have been looted and markets burned.


But while Khartoum had been a peaceful city before April, Darfur has been torn by decades of violence.


More than 300,000 people were killed in Darfur in the 2000s when Sudan’s former dictator, Omar Hassan al-Bashir, ordered militias, widely known as the Janjaweed, to crush a rebellion among non-Arab groups. A popular uprising in 2019 led to Mr. al-Bashir’s ouster, but in Darfur the situation has continued to deteriorate, including with ethnically motivated attacks in recent years.


The latest influx of refugees is also increasing pressure on Chad, a landlocked, vast Central African country that shares 870 miles of border with Sudan and is the among the world’s poorest nations. Its eastern region, semiarid and isolated, already has more than 400,000 refugees from Darfur living in 13 camps, which are now filling with new arrivals helped by the U.N. refugee agency.

In Borota, thousands Sudanese refugees have joined people who had been displaced by earlier conflicts in Darfur.


About 90 percent of the refugees from Darfur recently registered by the United Nations in Chad are women and children. For most families, returning to Sudan is out of the question.


“Move back to what, and where?” said Khadija Abubakar, a mother of five young children who said she fled from Kango Haraza with her husband this month. “As long as there’s no security, we’re staying.”


The violence in Darfur shows no sign of abating. In El Geneina, the capital of West Darfur and 15 miles from Chad, armed groups have looted health care facilities and burned refugee camps. Hospitals are out of service, and humanitarian workers have fled the city for Chad, leaving thousands of people in need and trapped amid the fighting.


Over the past few days, at least 280 people were killed in El Geneina alone, according to the Sudanese Doctors’ Trade Union. Aid workers and Chadian officials now expect that a pause in the fighting there could push tens of thousands to flee to Chad.


In Borota, which is four miles from the Sudanese border, many refugees had fled earlier eruptions of violence in Darfur, according to Jean-Paul Habamungu, the coordinator of the U.N. agency’s operations in Eastern Chad.


He was one of the first humanitarian workers to reach Borota, arriving on May 11. What he saw stunned him: hundreds of children, most of whom had arrived in the previous days, lining up in front of him, so many people that it caught the local authorities and aid agencies by surprise.

Awa Ibrahim Abakar, 35, a refugee from Darfur now staying in Chad, said gunmen killed her husband and wounded one of her four children.


The refugee encampment is at least four hours away from the closest aid outpost in the region, and some parts of the sandy and bumpy tracks used to traverse the area will soon be submerged in the rainy season. As we crossed a few dried-out wadis, or rivers, on our way to Borota, raindrops appeared and puddles began to form.


Ms. Abubakar, the mother of five, has spent her days waiting for her husband to find food in a nearby village. As she tried to keep two toddlers playing in the dust nearby, she said that she also needed water and soap.


Other Sudanese repeated similar pleas. We need vaccination for the children, we need tarp for when the rain comes,” said Adoum Ahmad Issa, a 43-year-old father of four who said he had arrived in Chad in early May.


In nearby tents, children in rags dozed on their mother’s laps, while other parents prepared madeeda hilba, a thick porridge, and grilled small grasshoppers in the 100-degree heat. Most appeared to have fled with little more than a few cooking supplies, sheets and mats and, in some cases, a donkey.


Mr. Issa and nearly two dozens other refugees interviewed this month said the violence in Darfur had preceded the fighting in Khartoum. But many said the new conflict had only made things worse.


It is unclear how many people have died in Darfur, but they are estimated to be in the hundreds. At least 822 civilians have been killed and more than 3,200 injured in the month long conflict, according to the doctors union.

At the border between Koufroune in Chad, and the Sudanese village of Tendelti, people journey back and forth to gather personal belongings.


Aid agencies have rushed to try to help refugees who have gathered in Chad, often in sites miles apart. In some areas, like in the Chadian border village of Koufroune, refugees have managed to bring furniture, mattresses and bed frames.


On a recent morning, some men and teenagers on horse-drawn carts crossed a dried riverbed — the border between the two countries — journeying back and forth between Koufroune and the Sudanese village of Tendelti, just on the other side. Some villagers said they fled under gunfire in the early days of the conflict. Tendelti now stands emptied of most residents.


A few Chadian soldiers stood guard by the riverbed, under the shade of mango trees bending under the weight of ripe fruit.


“Tendelti is now here, in Chad,” said Fatima Douldoum, a 50-year-old mother of five who said she fled in late March. Relatives crossed back in April to retrieve their beds.

“Tendelti is now here, in Chad,” Fatima Douldoum, left, a 50-year-old mother of five, said referring to her village in Darfur. She sat with her family under a tent made of scarves and other fabric.


“It is the first time so many people are bringing everything they can,” said Aleksandra Roulet-Cimpric, the country director for the International Rescue Committee, an aid organization providing health services in Koufroune. “It’s also the first time so many of them say ‘We’re not coming back.’”


Kango Haraza, too, is now mostly empty, and in recent days people have reached Borota from other Sudanese communities, said Mr. Habamungu of the U.N. agency.


As he visited the site last week, Mr. Habamungu said a Chadian official told him that the war in Darfur was only starting. “That made me pause and wonder,” Mr. Habamungu said. “How we are going to cope?”

A family from Darfur organized their belongings under a tree in Koufroune, Chad. Aid agencies have struggled to provide aid to the swelling number of Sudanese refugees arriving in Chad.


Violence in Sudan

Fighting between two military factions has thrown Sudan into chaos, with plans for a transition to a civilian-led democracy now in shambles.

Elian Peltier is the West Africa correspondent. He joined The Times in 2017 and was previously based in Paris and London. He now lives in Dakar, Senegal. @ElianPeltier


View original: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/16/world/africa/chad-sudan-conflict.html


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