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Tuesday, May 23, 2023

Red Cross warns of possible humanitarian disaster on Sudan-Chad border

The U.N. refugee agency said some 60,000 to 90,000 people have fled into neighbouring Chad since violence erupted last month.

• May 23, 2023
Screen shot from a video of damaged East Nile Hospital in Khartoum, Sudan
Screen shot from a video of damaged East Nile Hospital in Khartoum, Sudan [Photo: RSF/via REUTERS]

Red Cross official on Tuesday said it would be impossible to relocate Sudanese refugees in Chad before the start of rainy seasons in June.

According to the official, Sudanese refugees are streaming into Chad so quickly, and it will be impossible to relocate them all to safer places before the rain becomes serious therefore flagging the risk of a disaster.

The U.N. refugee agency said some 60,000 to 90,000 people have fled into neighbouring Chad since violence erupted last month.

It said thousands of the refugees have converged in a makeshift camp in a village named Borota, where Pierre Kremer of the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) was based last week.

“We know that we won’t be able to relocate all of them before the rainy season,” Mr Kremer told a Geneva press briefing via video link from Nairobi.

“It’s a bit of a race now to relocate as many as we can. We run the risk of a major humanitarian disaster in this area.”

Access to the area is expected to be difficult after the rainy season starts because large streams, known as wadis, are set to cut it off from supplies.

Some 80 per cent of those arriving are women and children, many of whom have been separated from their parents as they fled from Darfur, where violence between warring factions in the capital has spread in recent weeks.

Mr Kremer said there had been reports of snake and scorpion bites among the refugees sleeping on the ground.

The U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) has said it is seeking to move refugees gathering in border areas to pre-existing refugee camps in Chad and establish five new ones.

A UNHCR spokesperson in Chad, Eujin Byun, told Reuters that many refugees reported losing family members and having their homes burned down. Teenagers were often travelling alone with infants, she said.

“I’m overwhelmed to see them,” she said. “It’s a lot of children, and it’s really heartbreaking as they don’t know where their parents are.”

(Reuters/NAN)

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