Sunday, February 25, 2024

Sudan: SAF & RSF renewed clashes in Ad Du'ayn, East Darfur - 9 killed, 4 injured, 20 houses burnt down

DTM (Displacement Tracking Matrix) Sudan Flash Alert - Update Three
Dated Wednesday, 21 February 2024 - here is a copy in full:

Conflict in Ad Du'ayn  (Ad Du'ayn Town), East Darfur

On 20 February 2024, clashes renewed between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in Ad Du'ayn Town of Ad Du'ayn locality, East Darfur. 

SAF reportedly conducted airstrikes targeting RSF positions across At Tadamon neighbourhood. 

As a result of the violence, nine individuals were reportedly killed, and four others were injured. 

Estimates on the number of displaced individuals are yet to be confirmed; however, the field teams reported that the displaced households sought refuge with host communities and relatives within Ad Du'ayn Town. 

Field teams also noted that 20 houses were completely burnt down. The situation remains tense and unpredictable. 


DTM will continue to monitor the developments closely and will provide further information on displacement and population mobility across Sudan, on a weekly basis, via its Weekly Displacement Snapshot


Disclaimer: Due to the current circumstances, the DTM network is relying on remote interviews with key informants and further verification is not possible at this time.


*DTM Sudan Flash Alerts provide an initial estimation of affected population figures gathered from field reports. All information is therefore pending verification through DTM’s Emergency Event Tracking (EET) and/or registration activities and is not to be used as official figures.


Source: VIEW IN BROWSER

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Further Reading


Sudan Watch - February 25, 2024

Sudan: Fire in Shia'ria (Shia'ria Town), East Darfur

10 houses burnt down completely, while 7 were partially damaged.

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2024/02/sudan-fire-in-shiaria-shiaria-town-east.html

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Sudan Watch - February 25, 2024

Sudan: Fires in Mukjar (Mukjar Town), Central Darfur

Reportedly, the cause of the fire was a household accident resulting in 50 houses burned down. Displaced households sought refuge with host communities and relatives within Mukjar Town. 

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2024/02/sudan-fires-in-mukjar-mukjar-town.html

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Sudan Watch - February 25, 2024

Sudan: SAF & RSF clashes in Al Fasher, North Darfur

On 23 and 24 February 2024, clashes renewed between SAF and RSF in Al Fasher Town of Al Fasher locality, North Darfur. 

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2024/02/sudan-saf-rsf-clashes-in-al-fasher.html

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END

Sudan: Fire in Shia'ria (Shia'ria Town), East Darfur

DTM (Displacement Tracking Matrix) Sudan Flash Alert - Update One
Dated Sunday, 25 February 2024 - here is a copy in full:

Fire Shia'ria (Shia'ria Town), East Darfur

On 23 February 2024, a fire broke out in Shia'ria Town of Shia'ria locality, East Darfur. The fire was reportedly the result of the heat and dry winds. 


As a result of the fire, field teams reported that 10 houses burnt down completely, while seven were partially damaged. Field teams reported that displaced households sought refuge with host communities and relatives within Shia'ria Town.  The situation remains tense and unpredictable. 


DTM will continue to monitor the developments closely and will provide further information on displacement and population mobility across Sudan, on a weekly basis, via its Weekly Displacement Snapshot


Disclaimer: Due to the current circumstances, the DTM network is relying on remote interviews with key informants and further verification is not possible at this time.


*DTM Sudan Flash Alerts provide an initial estimation of affected population figures gathered from field reports. All information is therefore pending verification through DTM’s Emergency Event Tracking (EET) and/or registration activities and is not to be used as official figures.


Source: VIEW IN BROWSER


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Further Reading


Sudan Watch - February 25, 2024

Sudan: Fires in Mukjar (Mukjar Town), Central Darfur

Reportedly, the cause of the fire was a household accident resulting in 50 houses burned down. Displaced households sought refuge with host communities and relatives within Mukjar Town. 

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2024/02/sudan-fires-in-mukjar-mukjar-town.html

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Sudan Watch - February 25, 2024

Sudan: SAF & RSF clashes in Al Fasher, North Darfur

On 23 and 24 February 2024, clashes renewed between SAF and RSF in Al Fasher Town of Al Fasher locality, North Darfur. 

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2024/02/sudan-saf-rsf-clashes-in-al-fasher.html

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Sudan Watch - February 22, 2024

Sudan: SIM card frenzy in Port Sudan amid blackouts. Map of Internet availability and connectivity in Sudan

Map showing Internet availability and network connection in Sudan 20/Feb/2024

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2024/02/sudan-sim-card-frenzy-in-port-sudan.html

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END

Sudan: Fires in Mukjar (Mukjar Town), Central Darfur

DTM (Displacement Tracking Matrix) Sudan Flash Alert - Update One
Dated Sunday, 25 February 2024 - here is a copy in full:

Fire in Mukjar (Mukjar Town), Central Darfur

On 23 February 2024, a fire broke out in Mukjar Town of Mukjar locality, Central Darfur. Reportedly, the cause of the fire was a household accident. 


As a result, 50 houses burned down. According to the field team, displaced households sought refuge with host communities and relatives within Mukjar Town. The situation remains tense and unpredictable. 


DTM will continue to monitor the developments closely and will provide further information on displacement and population mobility across Sudan, on a weekly basis, via its Weekly Displacement Snapshot


Disclaimer: Due to the current circumstances, the DTM network is relying on remote interviews with key informants and further verification is not possible at this time.


*DTM Sudan Flash Alerts provide an initial estimation of affected population figures gathered from field reports. All information is therefore pending verification through DTM’s Emergency Event Tracking (EET) and/or registration activities and is not to be used as official figures.


Source: VIEW IN BROWSER

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Related


Sudan Watch - February 25, 2024

Sudan: SAF & RSF clashes in Al Fasher, North Darfur

On 23 and 24 February 2024, clashes renewed between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in Al Fasher Town of Al Fasher locality, North Darfur. 

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2024/02/sudan-saf-rsf-clashes-in-al-fasher.html


END

Sudan: SAF & RSF clashes in Al Fasher, North Darfur

DTM (Displacement Tracking Matrix) Sudan Flash Alert - Update Fifteen
Dated Sunday, 25 February 2024 - here is a copy in full:

Conflict in Al Fasher (Al Fasher Town), North Darfur

On 23 and 24 February 2024, clashes renewed between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in Al Fasher Town of Al Fasher locality, North Darfur. 


Field teams reported that the event led to widespread displacement from eastern to southern neighbourhoods within Al Fasher Town. 


Estimates on the number of displaced individuals are yet to be confirmed. The situation remains tense and unpredictable. 


DTM will continue to monitor the developments closely and will provide further information on displacement and population mobility across Sudan, on a weekly basis, via its Weekly Displacement Snapshot


Disclaimer: Due to the current circumstances, the DTM network is relying on remote interviews with key informants and further verification is not possible at this time.


*DTM Sudan Flash Alerts provide an initial estimation of affected population figures gathered from field reports. All information is therefore pending verification through DTM’s Emergency Event Tracking (EET) and/or registration activities and is not to be used as official figures.


Source: VIEW IN BROWSER

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Related


Sudan Watch - February 24, 2024

Sudan: Clashes erupted between the RSF and armed tribal groups in Um Kadadah locality, North Darfur

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2024/02/sudan-clashes-erupted-between-rsf-and.html

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Sudan Watch - February 22, 2024

Sudan: SIM card frenzy in Port Sudan amid blackouts. Map of Internet availability and connectivity in Sudan

Map showing Internet availability and network connection in Sudan 20 Feb 2024

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2024/02/sudan-sim-card-frenzy-in-port-sudan.html

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Sudan Watch - February 19, 2024

Sudan: Conflict in Al Fasher capital of N. Darfur State

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2024/02/sudan-conflict-in-al-fasher-town-north.html

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Sudan Watch - February 16, 2024

Situation Update Feb 2024: 10 months into conflict between SAF & RSF, war in Sudan is taking a new turn

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2024/02/situation-update-feb-2024-10-months.html

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Sudan Watch - February 14, 2024

Darfur tribal leaders agree with Sudanese Sheikh Musa Hilal to lead initiative to stop war in Sudan

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2024/02/darfur-tribal-leaders-agree-with.html

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Sudan Watch - February 08, 2024

Sudan hit by internet blackout as conflict continues

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2024/02/sudan-hit-by-internet-blackout-as.html

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END

Saturday, February 24, 2024

Sudan: Clashes erupted between the RSF and armed tribal groups in Um Kadadah locality, North Darfur

DTM (Displacement Tracking Matrix) Sudan Flash Alert

Dated Saturday, 24 February 2024 - here is a copy in full:


Conflict in Um Kadadah (Um Kadadah Town), North Darfur

On 22 February 2024, clashes erupted between the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and armed tribal groups in  Um Kadadah Town of Um Kadadah locality, North Darfur.  


Field teams reported that the event led to widespread displacement across Um Kadadah locality, displacing the majority of Um Kadadah Town residents.  


Affected households sought refuge in surrounding locations including Burush Town and Jebel Hilla, Um Gafala, Zarafa, Umm Sidra, El Mashura and Damair villages of Um Kadadah locality. The situation remains tense and unpredictable. 


DTM will continue to monitor the developments closely and will provide further information on displacement and population mobility across Sudan, on a weekly basis, via its Weekly Displacement Snapshot


Disclaimer: Due to the current circumstances, the DTM network is relying on remote interviews with key informants and further verification is not possible at this time.


*DTM Sudan Flash Alerts provide an initial estimation of affected population figures gathered from field reports. All information is therefore pending verification through DTM’s Emergency Event Tracking (EET) and/or registration activities and is not to be used as official figures.


Source: VIEW IN BROWSER


END

Unable to survive in Egypt, refugees return to Sudan. Egypt hosts nine million refugees and immigrants

THIS stomach churning report paints a picture of hopeless despair: unable to survive in Egypt, Sudanese refugees are returning to Sudan not knowing how or where to sleep safely. "We can't go back, we can't move anywhere else, and we can't stay here," Ali said from a Sudanese community centre in Cairo which is also under threat of eviction. Their priority, many told AFP, is finding anywhere safe to lay their heads, even if only on a cold tile floor. 

Read more in report from AFP via Yahoo.com
By Bahira Amin
Dated Tuesday, 13 February 2024, 1:55 AM GMT - here is a copy in full:

Unable to survive in Egypt, refugees return to war-torn Sudan
Sudanese drivers rest on May 14, 2023 after transporting evacuees from Sudan into Egypt, in Wadi Karkar village near Aswan (Khaled DESOUKI)


Ten months after Sudan's brutal war sent hundreds of thousands fleeing, many of those who sought refuge in neighbouring Egypt are caught between the grim choice of homelessness or returning at their own peril.


Single mother Rehab has been in Egypt for seven months, fighting to build a life for her children. "I have a daughter who was born here, and I can't work to provide for her," the 28-year-old told AFP.


Gathered in a small church in eastern Cairo, dozens of women like Rehab said their families -- cramped into overcrowded apartments -- have been sleeping on bare floors since they arrived.


"People came to Egypt thinking life will be better here," 28-year old Ibram Kiir, a Sunday school teacher from Sudan who has been in Egypt for five years and helps refugees through the church, told AFP.  "But then reality hits. They don't have any money, they can't get an apartment, it's cold and they can't get winter clothes. So they turn back," he said.


Since the fighting began in April between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, over 450,000 people have crossed the border into Egypt, according to official figures. Their priority, many told AFP, is finding anywhere safe to lay their heads, even if only on a cold tile floor.


But as the months stretch on, employment, proper housing and help become nearly impossible to find, with Egypt's two-year economic crisis rapidly worsening. Soaring inflation -- which registered a record high of 39.7 percent last year -- decimated livelihoods just as war-weary Sudanese began arriving.


Many turned up with just the clothes on their backs. They ended up staying in small apartments with two or three families at a time, many of them with only one breadwinner between them earning less than minimum wage.


Dan Mhik Akom, a 34-year-old who cleans houses part-time, tried to convince a friend things would get better. But after months watching his family "unable to even get to the kitchen to feed themselves" because of overcrowding, "he made up his mind and returned to Sudan," he told AFP.


- 'Rather die' -


Another Sunday school teacher, Randa Hussein, said her cousin left Cairo in October, heading back to her home on the war-ravaged outskirts of Khartoum. She said she "would rather die there than stay here," said Hussein, 33. Her family has not heard from her since.


Hussein is now hosting another refugee, a 20-year old mother of two who had been staying with her grandmother, until the landlord threatened the elderly woman with eviction if the newcomers did not leave. Unable to find a job or an apartment, "she's insisting on going back to Sudan," Hussein said. "She has a one-year-old she can't feed. She doesn't know what to do."


Yet back in Sudan, the situation is no better: her Khartoum neighbourhood has been shelled beyond recognition, and the homes that still stand are overrun with fighters. 


"People are being forced to choose between being homeless and being unsafe," said Sudanese political economist Raga Makawi. "Unable to afford even squalid conditions in Egypt, they choose to go back, preferring to negotiate their security with armed actors however they can," she told AFP.


The threat of homelessness is just around the corner for several Sudanese AFP interviewed.


Hawa Talfon, a preacher's wife, was kicked out with only two weeks' notice for hosting too many displaced family members. She had lived in her home in eastern Cairo for five years, before her brother's family joined her to flee the war. "What was I supposed to do? Kick them out?" she asked, after her landlord objected to her guests.


- 'Burden' -


AFP heard from dozens of Sudanese families across Cairo who faced the same fate, with landlords citing reasons such as "excess wear-and-tear" on their properties.


Under the shadow of the nationwide financial crisis, rights groups and Sudanese living in Egypt have warned of rising anti-refugee sentiment.


Yasser Ali, 40, who came to Cairo in 2002 to study law, told AFP that just in the past year, "everything has changed, people's attitudes have got a lot more aggressive."


According to Nour Khalil, founder of the advocacy organisation Refugees Platform in Egypt, there is "a concerted campaign, based purely on misinformation, to place the blame for the current economic crisis on society's most vulnerable."


Last month, the government said it would audit how much Egypt's "guests" -- as the administration calls nine million refugees and immigrants -- cost the country.


Almost in tandem, Khalil and other rights defenders tracked a rise in social media posts labelling refugees as a "burden", though most receive little to no assistance from either the United Nations or the government.


Cairo for its part holds that new arrivals are allowed to work and move "freely".


Rents have soared in Cairo as the economic crisis worsens, though rights groups and Sudanese told AFP landlords were specifically targeting Sudanese residents.


"You either pay up or they'll find someone who will," Kiir said, with some families like Talfon's given a different ultimatum: kick out "your own flesh and blood" or leave.


As the war rages, people have been left with no options.


"We can't go back, we can't move anywhere else, and we can't stay here," Ali said from a Sudanese community centre in Cairo -- which is also under threat of eviction.          


bha/sbh/dcp/jsa 

View original: https://news.yahoo.com/unable-survive-egypt-refugees-return-015555421.html

END