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Sudan: Continued conflict in Darfur causes massive displacements

Mercredi 8 Décembre 2021

Jabal Moon in West Darfur was hit by new attacks December 8 with reports that villages have been burned and people fleeing. The Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) is deeply concerned by the escalating violence over the past three weeks.


“Atrocious levels of armed conflict in Darfur have levelled settlements and displaced hundreds of thousands of people this year alone,” said Will Carter, Country Director for the Norwegian Refugee Council in Sudan. “National authorities and the international community must urgently deal with the bloody reality of this spiraling violence.”

Over the past three weeks there has been a successive attacks on civilians causing death and mass displacement spreading over five localities of West and North Darfur. Close to 100 people were killed and around 15 villages or displacement sites were burned to the ground in the Kerenik and Jabal Moon areas of West Darfur. On December 8, only three weeks after the initial attack, Jabal Moon was once again hit by new attacks with reports of new villages burnt and people fleeing.

A joint humanitarian team, including NRC staff, assessed parts of Jabal Moon’s conflict-affected areas last week.

“We fled to the mountain while our houses were looted and burned to ashes. We have no place to return to and cannot even access our crops because of the violence. We have been living under trees and in makeshift shelters in the mountains,” a survivor told NRC.

The escalation of the past weeks highlights the alarming levels of violence that have shaken Darfur throughout 2021. More than 430,000 people were displaced due to conflict in Sudan, mostly in Darfur from January to October this year. This is the highest number of civilians fleeing violence since the height of Darfur’s conflict ten years ago.

“We have been neglected by the government. Without security there will be no peace,” a community representative told NRC. 

“Hundreds of thousands of people in Darfur are now running for their lives, and even more are left with nothing. Promises to protect civilians have been empty and must now be fulfilled,” said Carter. “Long-running disputes are quickly erupting into uncontained armed conflict and massive harm on civilians.”

NRC is also concerned about signs of continuing conflict from all sides despite local authorities’ attempts to de-escalate.

“Sudanese national authorities and armed groups must ensure that civilians and civilian property are not targeted, and that aid workers are allowed to assist populations safely and freely,” Carter said. “The international community simply hasn’t kept pace with the deteriorating humanitarian situation beyond Khartoum – neither in terms of preventing armed conflict nor in terms of protecting people trapped or fleeing from it. This must change.”

Facts:

  • In the town of Kerenik, West Darfur, tribal clashes resulted in at least 29 deaths and over 40 wounded on December 5. In Jabal Moon, West Darfur, at least 12 villages and displacement camps were burned down between November 17 and 30 during two separate incidents, with around 50 people killed and nearly 10,000 displaced.
  • More than 430,000 people have been newly displaced by armed conflict in Sudan this year alone, adding to more than three million people internally displaced in the past two decades.
  • The withdrawal of UNAMID at the end of 2020 removed a neutral deterrent to violence and occurred in the wake of Darfur’s new chapter of conflict. 
  • Sudan hosts over a million refugees from South Sudan, Eritrea, Ethiopia and many other countries.
  • Sudan has one of the five largest UN humanitarian appeals in the world, and yet is woefully under-funded. This year’s protection response is only 15 per cent funded.
  • Chronic bureaucratic obstacles are delaying the delivery of humanitarian assistance, particularly the incoming of relief items and aid workers.
  • NRC returned to Sudan in 2020. So far in 2021, NRC has assisted more than 110,000 people affected by conflict and displacement around the country, providing multipurpose cash, shelter, education, clean water, and other community-facing services.

Note to editors:

Photos for free use are available here.

Media contact details:

Justin Lynch: Sudan Advocacy Manager, Norwegian Refugee Council. Justin.lynch@nrc.no  WhatsApp: +1-518-727-7885.

NRC’s media team in Oslo: media@nrc.no , +4790562329