Sunday 7 February 2016

Civilians fleeing Darfur violence face dire conditions, UN says

Tens of thousands of civilians fleeing weeks of clashes between troops and rebels in Darfur’s Jebel Marra area face “dire” humanitarian circumstances, the United Nations has said.
Fighting in the Jebel Marra has flared between forces loyal to president Omar al-Bashir, wanted on war crimes charges relating to the Darfur conflict, and the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA-AW), led by Abdelwahid Nur, which has been battling him since 2003. Marta Ruedas, the UN humanitarian coordinator in Sudan, said conditions for the recently displaced were “pretty dire”.
“They are basically in need of everything,” she said.
The surge in violence “has seen, as a result, the worst civilian displacement that we have seen in the UN in the past decade” in the Jebel Marra area, where there were also heavy clashes in previous years, she said.
Fighting in Jebel Marra, which straddles North, South and Central Darfur states, flared on 15 January, with ground troops clashing and government forces using warplanes and artillery.
UN agencies have been unable to access some areas to verify the number of people forced to flee, Ruedas said.
“We cannot speak about complete numbers of IDPs [internally displaced persons], because we can only verify a small percentage” due to limited access to the region, she said.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said 38,000 people are reported to have fled to North Darfur state.
The situation in Central Darfur is even more difficult to assess because of limited access, with reports of up to 50,000 people fleeing.

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