UNICEF Ready To Aid Sudan’s 15 Million Children After Government-Rebel Accord
Declaring that the immediate survival and long-term well-being of Sudan’s 15 million children are at stake, the United
Nations Children’s Fund has pledged to invest in the social services of Africa’s largest country and roll out nationwide
projects following agreements between the government and rebels in the south.
“We hope both sides will soon conclude the comprehensive North-South peace agreement that all of Sudan so badly needs,”
UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy said, urging donors to commit new resources now so that major additional efforts
can be launched as soon as peace is formally declared.
The Government and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) yesterday initialled three protocols on
political and power sharing issues, a move hailed by Secretary-General Kofi Annan as “a major step forward” towards
ending two decades of war that have left millions dead, injured or homeless.
UNICEF noted that conflict still continued in the western region of Darfur, where one million people have been uprooted
from their homes and thousands killed in fighting between Arab militias and black African Sudanese.
Referring to the agreements in the southern conflict, UNICEF said it was ready to help the Sudanese people seize the
opportunities of peace, including much-needed advances in health, education and clean water at the community level.
Thousands of children separated from their families and children recruited into armed forces will need special
protection, while major movements of displaced people and returning refugees are also expected in a challenging and
complex environment, it added.
“We are hopeful that Sudan’s natural wealth will be harnessed to the needs of children instead of war in the very near
future,” Ms. Bellamy said.