Aid activity in Darfur, western Sudan, was a network whose operations will be affected by the expulsion of 13 international agencies and the closure of three NGOs, the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator John Holmes said in New York.
The closures were announced shortly after the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued an arrest warrant for President Omar el-Bashir on 4 March on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity. Bashir denies the charges.
"About 1.1 million people are receiving food for March and April thanks to an ad hoc and one-off distribution by local food committees," Ameerah Haq, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Sudan, said in Khartoum, announcing the findings of a joint assessment.
At the same time, the leader of the rebel Sudan Liberation Movement, Abdel Wahid Al-Nur, said he had received "alarming reports of the situation" in Darfur. Local people, he told The Sudan Tribune, did not trust aid workers sent by the government.
Ahmed Hussein Adam, spokesman for the Justice and Equality Movement, said the "situation is very bad in the camps"; four children had died in the past two days of malnutrition-related complications in Shangil Tobaya camp, North Darfur.
The assessment was conducted from 11 to 19 March in all three Darfur states by UN and Sudanese government officials.
"By the beginning of May, as the hunger gap approaches, and unless the World Food Programme has found partners able to take on the mammoth distribution task, these people will not receive their rations," it stated.
Sudan has said the gap left by the expulsions could be filled by national relief organisations, but the UN and other international aid agencies doubt that long-term capacity exists.
Photo: Christine Madison/IRIN |
A camp in eastern Chad that has hosted thousands of Darfur refugees since 2003. |
Gaps
According to the findings, massive gaps remain for the 4.7 million conflict-affected Darfuris, in food, health, non-food items and shelter, water, sanitation and hygiene.
Clean water will become a key issue within a month, Haq said. More than 850,000 people are being supplied with potable water by the Sudanese government, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and national NGOs.
However, within four weeks, existing funds for spare parts and fuel for water pumps will be depleted, while sanitary facilities will need urgent maintenance to prevent disease outbreaks.
Healthcare will also face severe shortages soon, with salaries of the government staff secure only until the end of April. Some 650,000 people do not have access to full healthcare.
In terms of shelter, 692,400 people waiting for materials before the rains begin will not receive them unless the UN Joint Logistics Centre finds partners to carry out the distributions and gains access to existing distribution lists, she added.
Haq said the government had cooperated with the UN during the assessment "in an open and constructive atmosphere", adding that "all sides recognised the challenges and were committed to finding solutions".
By the beginning of May, as the hunger gap approaches, and unless the World Food Programme has found partners able to take on the mammoth distribution task, these people will not receive their rations |
Security fears
"The report is grim reading, but it is not unexpected: we knew the problems facing Darfur were horrendous," said an aid worker in Darfur, on condition of anonymity.
Security fears have since continued to increase. The joint UN–African Union peacekeeping force to Darfur reported on 24 March that several attacks against aid workers had taken place in recent days.
These included an ambush by armed men on camels on 21 March on four Sudanese staff working in West Darfur for the Fellowship for African Relief (FAR) and Tearfund. One was beaten, another robbed. On 23 March, another Sudanese FAR staff member was shot dead in Kango Haraza, West Darfur.
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