UN Refugee-Protection Official Finds Unpredictability, Under-Funding in Darfur
New York, Jun 24 2005 11:00AM
Despite some “pockets” of stability, displaced persons and returnees in the strife-racked Sudanese region of Darfur
still face unpredictability, threats of violence, and under-funded protection services, according to the top official of
the United Nations refugee agency charged with protection of vulnerable persons.
Most disturbingly, rape continues to occur, reported Erika Feller, Director of International Protection of the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), who has just returned from a three-day visit to assess efforts to improve security
for some 700,000 people displaced West Darfur.
The situation for women venturing out of camps and villages to fetch firewood and water remains a particular concern,
Ms. Feller said. In addition, child protection and other security concerns are not getting the attention they deserve
because of the focus on sexual violence and a lack of funding.
“Protection also has its costs,” said UNHCR spokesman Ron Redmond in Geneva. “There is a gap here between the rhetoric
and the financial support that protection activities tend to attract.”
UNHCR has asked for $31.3 million for its Darfur operation, but so far has received only $3.9 million.
The UNHCR mission also found that there are pockets in Darfur where improved conditions have led to some limited,
spontaneous return movements. UNHCR has identified several villages where displaced persons have already gone back to
their homes with the aim to regain their former livelihoods.
“In selected locations, we are now cautiously engaging in small-scale self-sufficiency activities to support these
people re-establish themselves,” Mr. Redmond said. He added that any such effort must be done with full consciousness of
the interplay between ethnic conflict and the fragile natural environment, with its scarce resources.
In such an environment, reconciliation at all levels is a key element for any sustainable improvements in the protection
situation, he said.
ENDS