SPLM-N calls for UN humanitarian chief to visit rebel-held conflict areas

May 19, 2013 (KHARTOUM) - The rebel Sudan People’s Liberation
Movement-North (SPLM-N) has called on the head of the UN’s
humanitarian agency to visit areas in Blue Nile, South Kordofan and
Darfur outside of Sudanese government control that have been
off-limits for the past two years.
FILE - UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos (R) holds a joint press
conference with Sudanese Social Welfare Minister Amira al-Fadel
Mohamed in Khartoum on January 4, 2012 (GETTY)
SPLM-N secretary-general Yasir Arman made the comments in a statement
issued ahead of a scheduled three-day visit to Sudan by the head of
the UN Office for the Coordination for Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA),
Valerie Amos.

Amos, the under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and
emergency relief coordinator, is due to arrive in Khartoum on Monday.

Arman says the visit comes at a critical time, with Sudan witnessing a
worsening humanitarian crisis in Blue Nile, South Kordofan, North
Kordofan and Darfur states.

He says an estimated 4 million civilians have been displaced as a
result of the decade-long war in Darfur, while the Sudanese government
continues to deny humanitarian access in the border states of Blue
Nile and South Kordofan, where its army (SAF) simultaneously carries
out aerial and ground bombardments against the civilian population.

MAGNITUDE OF THE CRISIS

In its statement, the SPLM-N called on Amos to consider visiting
rebel-held areas which have previously been off-limits in order to
report to the international community the true depth of the
humanitarian crisis in the region, rather than visiting areas
pre-selected by the government that do not reflect the magnitude of
the crisis.

There are also calls for Amos to meet with the SPLM’s political
leadership and its humanitarian wing during her upcoming visit in
order to obtain information from both parties to the conflict.

“Khartoum is not interested in addressing the humanitarian situation
and as usual is buying time, using the visits of high profile
international officials to give lip service to the humanitarian
situation”, said Arman.

“The Sudanese regime and [Sudanese president] general [Omer] al-Bashir
have been the largest manufacturer of the humanitarian crisis in
Africa for 24 years continuously and the present regime has a long
record of targeting civilian populations and destroying lives. They
are permanently on the humanitarian crisis list for almost a quarter
of a century - the same regime with the same personalities”, he added.

OCHA says Amos plans to meet with officials from the Sudanese
government, including Bashir, as well as representatives from
humanitarian organisations, with discussions to focus on ways to
improve humanitarian access to people affected by conflict and
displacement, particularly in South Kordofan, Blue Nile and Darfur.

The under-secretary-general is also expected to travel to Darfur to
see for herself the ongoing humanitarian operation in Sudan’s western
region.

TOUGH STANCE NEEDED

Arman has urged Amos to take a firm stance on the Sudanese
government’s continued refusal to allow unfettered humanitarian access
to conflict-affected areas, saying it constituted a war crime under
international humanitarian law.

He said the SPLM-N stood ready to work with OCHA on a proposed
vaccination program to target preventable diseases, such as pertussis
and measles.

“We equally stated the need for a brief cessation of hostilities to
carry out the vaccination plan since Khartoum [has] refused - for more
than one-year - a full humanitarian cessation of hostilities. In the
absence of a humanitarian agreement with Khartoum and given the war
situation, there is a need to agree on where the vaccination program
will originate from”, he said.

Fighting erupted in South Kordofan in September 2011 when
Southern-aligned SPLM-N rebels launched an insurgency against the
Khartoum government, with the conflict spreading to neighbouring Blue
Nile state a few months later.

According to Arman, some 24 civilians were killed in the last three
months alone in Blue Nile and the Nuba Mountains, with many more
injured as a result of aerial bombardments.

More than 700 people, including internally displaced persons (IDPs)
and SPLM-N activists, have been arrested in government-held areas.
Some of them were subjected to torture, while others were sentenced to
death. Those arrested include 138 in Blue Nile state and about 200
from the Nuba Mountains area in South Kordofan state, including 45
women – some of whom are pregnant – as well as more than 50 leaders of
the SPLM-N.

Meanwhile, more than 200 people have been arrested from Darfur and
North Kordofan, including SPLM-N activists.

(ST)

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