UNHCR prepositioning aid for Darfur refugees in Tissi ahead of rains
in eastern Chad
Source: UNHCR - Fri, 17 May 2013 12:42 PM
Author: UNHCR







UNHCR is prepositioning aid for tens of thousands of Darfur refugees
in eastern Chad amid fears heavy rains will cut off access to the
group. Almost 30,000 people recently fled communal violence in North
and West Darfur, Sudan. The refugees are mainly women and children and
they urgently need shelter, food, clean water and medical assistance.
They say that they fled because people were killed during the violence
and that many houses were torched by armed men.

A first wave of Sudanese refugees started arriving in Tissi in eastern
Chad between January and March when clashes over goldmines in Jabel
Amer, North Darfur, turned into ethnic violence (between the Ben
Hissein and the Rizeigat.) A second group began arriving in early
April due to tribal conflicts (opposing Misseriya and Salamat tribes)
around the Um Dhukun area of West Darfur. In addition to the Darfur
refugees, the violence also forced almost 20,000 Chadians to cross
into Tissi, as well as 458 refugees from Central African Republic
(CAR) who had been in Darfur for years.

Tissi is in a remote and volatile Chadian border area straddling
troubled parts of northern CAR and Darfur. Roads to the area become
impassable during the rainy season lasting from May to November and
the first rains have already started. The region has little
infrastructure and new arrivals' presence is a strain on the local
communities.

To date, UNHCR has registered 28,278 Sudanese refugees in the Tissi
area. They are settled across 16 sites within a 100 km radius. Most
are herders moving frequently in search of pasture land and water for
their livestock and this makes it extremely challenging to register
and assist them.

To ensure UNHCR is able to offer protection and assistance to the
refugees until the next dry season, we have prepositioned enough aid
in the area to cover the needs of 3,000 refugee families. Aid
distribution will start on the weekend. Additional supplies are due to
arrive from our regional stockpile in Douala, Cameroon, to cover the
needs of another 4,000 families.

Due to the rains, we are in a race against time. Road transport
between Doula and Tissi takes 20 days - to speed up the delivery of
aid- UNHCR plans to hire a helicopter.

After the rains, UNHCR plans to relocate refugees to safety further
inland once available water sources are located in sites given to
UNHCR by the government. In the meantime, we are working with our
partners on rehabilitating some existing water pumps while we drill
boreholes. Refugees currently drink from a river, and so put
themselves at risk of contracting waterborne diseases.

Meanwhile, we have managed to relocate about 1,500 refugees to Goz
Amir a camp located around 250 kilometres north of Tissi. We provided
the relocated refugees with shelter, food and household items. We
halted the transfers due to heavy rains. An average of 300 refugees a
day continues to cross into Tissi as communal tensions persit in
Darfur. The new arrivals say that many more are on their way to Chad
but that armed groups are preventing them from crossing.

Before the latest influx, there were some 300,000 Darfur refugees in Chad.

For further information on this topic, please contact:
 ◦In Geneva, Fatoumata Lejeune-Kaba on mobile +41 79 249 34 83

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"South Sudan Info - The Kob" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to