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UN warns that food aid running out for Sudanese refugees in Chad

Adre, Chad
Reuters

Food aid for more than half a million refugees who have fled from Sudan to Chad will run out next month without extra funding, a World Food Programme official said on Wednesday.

“By December, there will be no assistance,” Pierre Honnorat, Chad country director for the UN agency, told Reuters. “We are calling for urgent, urgent funding now.”

Sudanese women who fled the conflict in Geneina in Sudan's Darfur region, line up to receive rice portions from Red Cross volunteers in Ourang on the outskirts of Adre, Chad, on 25th July, 2023

Sudanese women who fled the conflict in Geneina in Sudan’s Darfur region, line up to receive rice portions from Red Cross volunteers in Ourang on the outskirts of Adre, Chad, on 25th July, 2023. PICTURE: Reuters/Zohra Bensemra/File photo

More than 540,000 refugees have crossed from Sudan into Chad since war erupted seven months ago between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), according to the International Organization for Migration.

Many have fled from West Darfur, where ethnically driven violence and mass killings erupted again this month in the state capital El Geneina, pushing thousands more people to flee. Reuters has reported that between April and June this year the RSF and allied Arab militias conducted weeks of systematic attacks targeting the Masalit, El Geneina’s majority ethnic African tribe. 



Those who have arrived this year joined refugees and displaced people already in camps in Chad, where Honnorat described conditions as “extremely hard”. 

“Now it’s winter, but still it’s super hot,” he said. “The nutrition problem is going through the roof.” 

“We need $US25 million minimum every month to assist to provide a meal a day to those roughly 800,000 people we are trying to serve.”

Sudan’s conflict has also contributed to spreading hunger within the country. On Wednesday the UN Food and Agriculture Organization said it had distributed seeds for cereals that could feed 13 million to 19 million people, after farming was badly disrupted by the war’s impact. 

More than 20 million out of a total population of 49 million in Sudan are facing high levels of acute fuel insecurity, according to assessments by the UN, NGOs and other groups.

 

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