Fresh round of aerial bombing in West Darfur forces UN staff to relocate
19 February 2008 – The United Nations refugee agency has had to withdraw its staff from the volatile Sudanese-Chadian
border area after a series of aerial bombardments over the past two days in West Darfur that have also sparked deep
concern from Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the world body’s top humanitarian official.
Nine staff with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) had been caring for newly arrived Sudanese refugees in the
Birak area of eastern Chad before the sudden relocation, the agency reported.
“It is extremely frustrating to have to withdraw staff from the border,” said Jorge Holly, head of the UNHCR field
office in the eastern Chadian town of Guereda. “It is not only sad, but frustrating, because we cannot provide the
protection assistance we wish to give to these newly arrived refugees.”
Mr. Holly said the team would return immediately to the Birak area – currently home to as many as 10,000 Darfurians – as
soon as the security situation calmed down. Those refugees arrived in the area only a week or so ago after militia
attacks, reportedly backed by Government forces, against three other towns in West Darfur.
The UNHCR staff left for Guereda a few hours after a group of refugees arrived from West Darfur carrying a 55-year-old
whom they said had lost both her legs during an air raid yesterday by Sudanese Antonov planes on the Aro Sharow camp for
internally displaced persons (IDPs). The woman later died.
One of the relocated UNHCR staff said they heard the sounds of bombs and explosions coming from just across the border
in Sudan and felt the battle on the ground as well.
Aro Sharow is normally home to about 4,000 to 5,000 IDPs seeking safety from the conflict between rebels, Government
forces and allied militias that has engulfed the arid Darfur region since 2003.
Describing the bombing of Aro Sharow as unacceptable, Mr. Ban said in a statement released by his spokesperson that all
parties to the Darfur conflict must immediately end hostilities and commit to the political process being led by the
Special Envoys of the UN and African Union.
“A negotiated settlement to the Darfur conflict cannot take place amid continuing violence and the massive displacement
of civilians,” he said.
John Holmes, the Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and the Emergency Relief Coordinator, also urged
maximum restraint from all sides amid reports that further violence is imminent.
“I am very concerned for the civilian population caught in the middle of this violence,” he said yesterday. “Should
further attacks occur, the consequences for 20,000 civilians in this area could be disastrous.”
In his statement Mr. Ban voiced alarm about fresh reports indicating that Government forces and allied militia groups
were massing in the Jebel Moon area of West Darfur, calling it “a worrying sign that there will be continued hostilities
in the area.
“In addition to putting the lives of innocent civilians at risk, the ongoing violence significantly reduces the
humanitarian community’s access to those in need of life-saving assistance.”
Mr. Holmes noted that UN humanitarian agencies and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have been working to assess and
deliver assistance to the beleaguered civilian inhabitants of West Darfur after the Sudanese Government lifted a
blockade of almost two months of the state’s northern corridor.
But, “as the Government has reportedly now banned all flights to areas north of El Geneina [the state capital] for the
next three days, further efforts to assess the humanitarian situation on the ground are limited,” he warned.
More than 200,000 people have been killed in the Darfur conflict and at least 2.2 million others displaced, and the
hybrid UN-AU peacekeeping force deployed to the region (UNAMID) is working to try to quell the violence and suffering.
ENDS