April 3rd 2005
Humanitarian crisis in Darfur set to continue until 2006, warns Oxfam
The humanitarian crisis in Darfur is set to continue until late 2006,
international aid agency Oxfam warned today. Oxfam is sending two
planeloads of vital aid supplies to Darfur and two more to Chad this month,
where hundreds of thousands of displaced people living in overcrowded camps
are facing critical water shortages and increased threats of disease.
Two years of conflict in Darfur has caused tens of thousands of deaths due
to violence, hunger and disease. The huge international humanitarian
response has already saved many lives. But it falls far short of what is
needed.
"Over two million people in Darfur are almost completely dependant on
external assistance. Aid workers are doing all they can to help, but it
simply isn't enough. Most of the displaced people still do not feel safe
enough to return home. If they miss this year's planting season, the next
harvest won't be until October 2006. An end to the fighting is urgently
needed so people can begin to rebuild their lives," says Paul Smith-Lomas,
Oxfam's Regional Director.
The first of four planes is due to leave Manston airport in Kent, UK on
Monday evening, 2 May, and is headed for El Fasher in North Darfur. The
plane is carrying 34 metric tons of water and sanitation equipment which
will be used to provide clean drinking water to over 200,000 displaced
people in North Darfur. In Kebkabiya a once-small town whose population
more than tripled with the arrival of 60,000 displaced people water is in
such short supply that women must wait in the sweltering heat for up to six
hours to fill a bucket. In Dalih camp near Tawila, 10,000 people vie for
water from just two working hand pumps.
A second planeload of equipment is destined for South Darfur, including
Kalma camp which swelled to over 150,000 people in recent months. Oxfam
will work with local authorities to install water tanks and lay nearly 8
miles of pipe to deliver clean water to 25,000 people who are due to move
out of overcrowded Kalma to a new camp at Al Salaam.
In eastern Chad, water shortages are also worsening. The camp of Am Nabak
(pop. 16,000) has to get water by truck from the village of Iriba, 40 km
away. But water levels are decreasing in this arid, desert region, where
temperatures can reach 50 degrees C. The minimum standard for an emergency
response is 15 liters of water per person per day for drinking, cooking and
washing. But in the last few months, stress on the well in Iriba has been
so intense that it can only deliver 5 litres per person to Am Nabak each
day, a third of what the population needs.
"This inhospitable desert has become home for 200,000 refugees from Darfur
who lost everything. Their presence has modified a fragile balance with the
environment, and now the local population is also affected. Oxfam is
drilling a new well 20 km away from Am Nabak. But we still a need to find a
more sustainable solution," explains Cedric Fedida, an Oxfam aid worker in
Chad.
So far, Oxfam Ireland has given €600,000 to Chad (€300,000 from DCI) and €300,000 to Darfur.
For further information, contact:
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Paul Dunphy, Oxfam Ireland Press Officer
Tel: 6040706 / 0879058075 |
Cedric Fedida (Chad)
Tel: +235 380 700 or +88216 5010 1186 |
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