Recent fighting near Sudan-South Sudan border displaces 35,000
Recent fighting near Sudan-South Sudan border displaces 35,000
JUBA, South Sudan, April 24 (UNHCR) - Recent fighting near the border between Sudan and South Sudan has displaced some 35,000 people in areas around Heglig, Talodi and other parts of Sudan's South Kordofan province.
The UN refugee agency does not have access to the areas in question, but UNHCR is channeling aid through local agencies. The figures for the number of displaced come through these partners.
In South Sudan, a spate of aerial bombings in recent weeks hit parts of Unity, Warrap and Western Bahr el Ghazal states.
UNHCR said the three refugee sites in Unity state have thus far not been directly affected. "We have, nonetheless, seen an increase in the number of Sudanese refugees crossing the border, some of them seriously malnourished," said UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards.
In Yida settlement, more than 1,300 new arrivals were reported in the last four days, and recent average daily arrivals (230) have been at triple the rate seen in March and February. Some refugees say they left Sudan because of food shortages in South Kordofan, others say they fled intense fighting in their areas of origin.
The escalating hostilities are heightening concerns about the safety of refugees in Unity state. Yida is only a few kilometres from the border and has seen direct and indirect bombing and shelling over the past six months. Humanitarian agencies continue to provide the more than 20,000 refugees living there with life-saving assistance and essential services such as food, water, sanitation, community services and health care. "At the same time, we are advising them to urgently move to safer areas," Edwards noted.
So far, UNHCR has supported the relocation of more than 2,000 refugees to two sites further south in Unity state. The agency is preparing the sites and planning others to receive more refugees from Southern Kordofan and from Yida, should residents there opt to relocate. Food and other relief items are being pre-positioned in all three sites in Unity state in anticipation of rains.
In South Sudan's Upper Nile state, the pace of refugee arrivals from Sudan's Blue Nile state has slowed. There are currently more than 92,000 Sudanese refugees in Maban county, including some 52,000 in Doro settlement, 37,000 in Jammam settlement and several thousand to be relocated from border areas.
Access to and within Maban county is curtailed during the rainy season. UNHCR and its partners are working around the clock to secure critical road repairs to keep access open in the coming months.
Providing adequate water is the main challenge in Jammam. Despite intensive drilling, viable sources have remained elusive. UNHCR's partners are trucking in water and working on piping and surface water treatment for the rainy season. Meanwhile, larger rigs are being brought to the area to explore deeper wells. Until it is possible to provide more than the current 8.5 litres per person per day, agencies are identifying a suitable site for the relocation of some 15,000 refugees from the group in Jammam to reduce the pressure on water.
At Doro settlement, drilling efforts have been more successful. Partners have secured 12 litres per person per day and aim to reach the standard of 15 to 20 litres per person per day shortly.
In neighbouring Ethiopia's Benishangul-Gumuz region, UNHCR has received some 2,400 new refugees from Blue Nile state so far this month. The Adamazin transit centre is being expanded to accommodate new arrivals before they are transferred to Bambasi, the third camp in the area and which is currently being completed.
Months of intermittent fighting have driven more than 115,000 Sudanese refugees into South Sudan and nearly 30,000 into Ethiopia. Many more could follow if the conflict escalates further. UNHCR appeals to the governments of Sudan and South Sudan, and to other parties to these conflicts, to do their utmost to avoid displaced civilians being placed in harm's way and to avoid actions that could displace more people.
By Vivian Tan