UN says refugees fleeing new attacks in Darfur, many to dangerous area of Chad
29 February 2008 - As West Darfur continues to be scourged by a new wave of air and ground attacks, the United Nations refugee agency
estimated today that more than 13,000 Sudanese have fled to a remote area of Chad that is beset by its own inter-ethnic
strife.
According to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), just this week an additional 3,000 refugees arrived in
eastern Chad's volatile Birak area, where an assistance mission was cancelled yesterday after armed men on horseback
were spotted, along with black smoke rising from a burning village.
"The insecurity and close proximity to the Sudanese border mean UNHCR cannot establish a camp in the Birak area, but we
are trying to provide emergency assistance when our teams can get there," UNHCR spokesman Ron Redmond said in Geneva.
The agency is still awaiting approval from the Government of Chad to move the refugees to existing camps that already
house 240,000 people uprooted by the five-year conflict in Darfur, in which the Sudanese Government and militias are
fighting rebel factions and in which over 200,000 people, mainly non-combatants, have died.
A UNHCR team which reached the Birak area earlier in the week reported that the new arrivals had come there because of
repeated militia assaults on the Jebel Moun region of West Darfur.
Meanwhile, the Deputy Special Representative for Sudan, Ameerah Haq, visited Sileah in West Darfur yesterday as part of
an inter-agency assessment mission and found the town - which normally has a population of 20,000 - almost empty.
Only around 300 people remained, mostly elderly citizens who could not flee. The town was attacked on 8 February, in the
beginning of the current onslaught.
ENDS