Sudan crisis: 800,000 refugees could flee amid conflict, U.N. warns
Listen 3 min Comment on this story Comment Gift Article Share
More than 800,000 people could flee Sudan if fighting continues, triggering a massive refugee crisis in the region, the United Nations’ refugee agency has warned. Already, more than 100,000 refugees have fled Sudan — which was plunged into violence three weeks ago by two warring generals — and hundreds of thousands have been displaced internally, U.N. officials said Tuesday at a briefing in Geneva. The International Organization for Migration also said that 334,053 people had been internally displaced within the country since fighting broke out April 15, according to Reuters.
U.N. Humanitarian Affairs Coordinator Martin Griffiths, who is expected to travel to Sudan soon, said the situation is reaching a “breaking point.”
The latest influx of displaced people will add to the challenges of Sudan’s neighbors, who are hosting a large number of Sudanese refugees from previous conflicts. Some 30,000 people have arrived in recent weeks in Chad, already a temporary home to 400,000 refugees from its eastern neighbor.
International efforts to push the warring factions to a peace deal have grown more urgent, as recent cease-fires have not been completely observed. The Organization of Islamic Cooperation — which Sudan is a part of — will hold an emergency meeting in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, on Wednesday to discuss how to restore peace in Sudan. Representatives of the two sides locked in combat could soon meet in Saudi Arabia for talks, a senior U.N. official told the Associated Press.
Advertisement
Even before fighting erupted, about 16 million people in Sudan required humanitarian assistance. Now, conflict is turning the humanitarian crisis into a “full-blown catastrophe,” said Abdou Dieng, the top U.N. aid official in the country said Monday.
Roughly one third of all people, nearly 16 million, required humanitarian assistance before the conflict, and some 3. 7 million were displaced, mostly in Darfur.
The conflict pits Sudan’s military, under the leadership of de facto head of state Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, against the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces of Gen. Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, commonly known as Hemedti. The power struggle between the two generals has killed at least 500 people and injured thousands, according to the United Nations.
Amid widespread human misery, many citizens are without adequate food, power or water. The public health system was on the verge of collapse, with a majority of hospitals not operating, according to the World Health Organization. Residents of Khartoum, the capital, who ventured outdoors Monday saw bodies and looting, Reuters reported.
Advertisement
The World Food Program — which had suspended operations out of safety concerns — said it would resume food distribution in four states in the coming days.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken phoned African leaders, including Comorian President Azali Assoumani — who holds the rotating chair of the African Union — on Monday to press for collective action to bring an end to the fighting.
International evacuations continued, with three U.S.-facilitated convoys taking 700 people, including Americans and nationals from partner countries, from Khartoum to Port Sudan over the past few days, a State Department spokesman said Monday. Many will then travel to Jiddah. More than 2,100 people have been evacuated by Britain from Sudan, the U.K. Foreign Office said Monday.
Russia’s Defense Ministry said early Tuesday that four planes evacuated about 200 citizens of Russia and neighboring countries from Sudan.
Nigeria’s Azman Air will also evacuate citizens stuck on the chaotic Egypt border Tuesday, the airline said on Twitter.
Missy Ryan in Washington contributed to this report.
GiftOutline Gift Article
Source: The Washington Post