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Homes torched, displaced cry for aid in Sudan's Darfur

By AFP
Sudan Displaced women carry firewood and other belongings into the United Nations-African Union Mission in Darfur base in Khor Abeche, South Darfur, April 7, 2014.  By Albert Gonzalez Farran UNAMIDAFP
APR 8, 2014 LISTEN
Displaced women carry firewood and other belongings into the United Nations-African Union Mission in Darfur base in Khor Abeche, South Darfur, April 7, 2014. By Albert Gonzalez Farran (UNAMID/AFP)

ZAM ZAM (Sudan) (AFP) - First their homes were torched, and now the people themselves are burning, huddled under crude shelters to escape Sudan's fierce desert sun after fleeing Darfur's worst violence in a decade.

"We got here three weeks ago from north of Mellit town but until now we haven't got any aid," said Mohammedin Ishaq, 60, an elder among the more than 8,000 people the UN says have reached Zam Zam camp about 12 kilometres (seven miles) southwest of El Fasher, the capital of North Darfur state.

Ishaq spoke after calming his angry cohorts. They initially ordered away an AFP reporter who, despite tight government restrictions on the movement of journalists in Darfur, reached their parched refuge to obtain a rare first-hand account of their condition.

"Our money is about to run out and we don't know what to do," Ishaq said, calling for food and other assistance. "We need shelter as soon as possible because it is very hot."

Their home, Mellit, is about 75 kilometres north of Zam Zam, Darfur's largest camp for many of the two million people who had already fled violence in the region's 11-year conflict.

Other newly displaced said they arrived at Zam Zam from elsewhere in the state following the destruction of their homes by unidentified attackers.

An "alarming escalation of violence" in Darfur this year has led to the uprooting of more than 200,000 people, Mohamed Ibn Chambas, who heads the African Union-UN peacekeeping mission in Darfur (UNAMID), told the UN Security Council last week.

- 'Nonsense,' says Bashir aide -

He cited several reasons, in particular the actions of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) counter-insurgency unit that has "perpetrated attacks on communities".

Rebel offensives, criminal activity and inter-communal fighting over access to resources have also increased, said Chambas.

The chief assistant to President Omar al-Bashir, Ibrahim Ghandour, has dismissed as "nonsense" suggestions that the RSF were behind abuses.

The latest unrest and a soaring number of displaced have evoked comparisons with the early stages of the Darfur war, which shocked the world more than a decade ago.

Government-backed Janjaweed militia were deployed after rebels began an uprising.

The conflict led to arrest warrants for Bashir and his Defence Minister Abdelrahim Mohammed Hussein, both of whom are wanted by the International Criminal Court for alleged war crimes.

"What we saw was terrible, with troops looting and burning everything," said Omer Adam, 27, who fled more than 120 kilometres to Zam Zam from El Taweisha in the state's southeast corner.

He declined to say which forces were responsible.

"Most people here are women and children. We want the government or the UN agencies to bring us shelters and water pumps, immediately."

Al-Toma Mohammed, 30, a mother of three, said she escaped from an area called Bashim, in North Darfur.

- Workers assess aid needs -

"I don't know why they burned my house," she said, asking for food and shelter.

A convoy of aid workers left El Fasher for Zam Zam on Monday to try to assess the needs of the new arrivals, the United Nations said.

After weeks of little progress in requests to authorities for aid access in Darfur after the recent displacements, there was significant improvement at the end of March, the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said last week.

Assessments have already been made in some areas, and the UN's World Food Programme says it is providing food to people affected in North Darfur's El Taweisha and El Lait districts, and in South Darfur's Khor Abeche.

North Darfur's governor Osman Kbir said on local television that the humanitarian situation in the eastern part of the state, in Mellit, and around El Fasher "is 100 percent stable".

Those still waiting for help in Zam Zam are fending for themselves.

Some are in poor health, and the cries of children carry across the desert sand.

People shelter under trees, in the remains of abandoned houses, or make simple huts from bits of cloth and wood.

More solid mud-brick homes are found in the older section of Zam Zam which hosts more than 100,000 people, many of whom have lived there for years. A tribal leader said drug use is widespread among the camp's idle youth who grew up with no education.

Newly displaced boys walk two to three kilometres from Zam Zam's outskirts into the spawling older quarter to pump water.

They carry it back in plastic containers while girls forage for firewood.

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