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07/18/2006
Contact: Ken Bacon and Megan Fowler
ri@refugeesinternational.org; (202) 828-0110
“What was written
in the Darfur Peace Agreement is just paperwork,” says a local leader
of the Masalit tribe in Gereida in South Darfur. “After the
signing, attacks have increased.” Officials in Gereida, one of
Darfur’s largest concentrations of displaced people, report almost
nightly attacks in the area by mounted forces known as the Janjaweed, a
government-supported Arab militia.
The population of 128,000 displaced people dwarfs Gereida’s normal
population of 30,000 and is straining the limited humanitarian
infrastructure in the area. Without increased security—which only
the government of Sudan can assure now—and augmented humanitarian
services, death rates could soar during the approaching rainy
season. There is an urgent need for plastic sheeting, food
deliveries and better coordination of the humanitarian response.
The Darfur Peace Agreement, which was signed on May 5, has actually
made security worse in the area because virtually no one remains to
protect the people from further attacks and looting. Only one of the
three major rebel groups involved in Darfur’s 40–month civil war signed
the DPA with the government of Sudan. That group, the Sudan Liberation
Army (SLA) faction headed by Minni Minawi (who is scheduled to meet
with President Bush on July 25th as a reward for signing the peace
agreement) controlled the Gereida area. The SLA faction announced that
it would honor the ceasefire imposed by the DPA and moved its major
fighting force north, where Minawi is fighting for control of his own
tribe. By ending offensive operations that used to keep the
Janjaweed at bay, the army has left security to a feckless local SLA
force that lacks training, equipment, ammunition and leadership. Many
of the fighters are children armed with clubs.
By contrast, the government of Sudan has done nothing to disarm the
Janjaweed, the mounted Arab militia that has operated in league with
the government to push largely African tribes (such as the Masalit)
from its villages and farms. The last group of 1,100 people
arrived in late May, following a Janjaweed attack on their village 26
kilometers away. Now the Janjaweed are launching nightly attacks
along the periphery of the sprawling camp, stealing animals and killing
people who get in the way. As a result the camp is beginning to
fall in on itself , with people fleeing the edges of the camp closer to
the center. This will increase crowding in the camp and place people
farther from the areas they must go to feed the animals they still have
and gather firewood.
African Union troops in Gereida rarely patrol in the late
afternoon-early evening hours when most of the attacks take
place. The local AU commander says the limited mandate of the
force—it is supposed to report on cease fire violations—prevents the
type of aggressive patrolling that could provide a deterrent.
“There is no safety,” says a sheikh who led 600 people to the camp in
February. “We heard that the UN was coming to save us from the
war, but we haven’t seen anything yet,” the sheikh says. In fact,
the UN does want to replace the beleaguered AU force, but the Khartoum
government is resisting. Even if the UN does come in, there will
be no security until the government reigns in and disarms the
Janjaweed, as it is required to do under the DPA. So far, there is no
sign that the government is serious about disarming the Janjaweed or
carrying out the agreement. Some tribal leaders doubt that the
Khartoum government has the will or the power to disarm the Janjaweed,
who have seized large amounts of territory and thousands of cows,
camels and other animals for their nomadic flocks. In April,
government and Janjaweed forces attacked a number of villages around
Gereida, including Dito and Joghana, driving as many as 50,000 people
into the Gereida area. These attacks are what caused the
displaced population to surge to 128,000, according to a recent count.
There are only about half a dozen humanitarian agencies working in
Gereida, and at various times the insecurity between the town and
Nyala, the capital of south Darfur 90 kilometers to the north, has made
the delivery of humanitarian supplies difficult. Two months ago
the Khartoum government limited fuel deliveries to Gereida, further
complicating the humanitarian response.
Many new arrivals lack plastic sheeting to protect their huts from the
impending rains, although Oxfam says it is about to get 5,000
sheets. In addition, many families complain that they have not
received food distributions, apparently due to a change in
responsibility for food from the International Committee for the Red
Cross (ICRC) to the World Food Program. The WFP, which recently
received a large food contribution from the U.S., is supposed to start
food deliveries next month, but the rains could make delivery difficult
for the next few months. Camp residents do seem to have adequate water,
and sanitation facilities are improving.
The ICRC and ARC International run health clinics, and Merlin is about
to open one. In addition, ARC and the Norwegian Refugee Council
are considering taking over coordination of humanitarian activities, a
move that would improve services.
Yet while the humanitarian response improves, the displaced people in
Gereida sit and wait until it is safe enough to return home. This won’t
happen until they know they can live in their villages and farm their
land without fear of further attacks.
Refugees International therefore
recommends that:
Sudan: Saving the Darfur Peace Agreement
Sudan: AMIS Needs New Resources for New Responsibilities
Sudan: Town in North Darfur Reflects Changing Nature of Conflict
Letter to President Bush: Meeting with Minni Minawi gives US chance to stop fighting in Darfur
Sudan: Strengthen the African Union Force During Transition to UN Peacekeepers
Darfur Peace Agreement Requires Continued US Engagement to Succeed
Baltimore Sun Op-Ed: U.S. must keep pushing for peace in Darfur
Refugee Voices: Displaced Three Times in Three Years in Darfur
Visual Mission: Displacement Continues in South Darfur
RI President Ken Bacon Discusses Darfur on Newshour with Jim Lehrer Tonight
Reuters: Sudan government forces attack Darfur rebel bases
No Power to Protect: The African Union Mission in Sudan
Sudan: July Mission to Monitor Implementation of Darfur Peace Agreement
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