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------Original message------
From: Eric Reeves <[email protected]>
To: "Eric Reeves" <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, June 3, 2013 11:25:18 PM GMT-0400
Subject: Taking Human Displacement in Darfur Seriously

*Taking Human Displacement in Darfur Seriously*

Eric Reeves, 3 June 2013

*OVERVIEW*

A brief moment of shocking clarity accompanied confirmation by the UN
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and the UN High
Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) that some *300,000** Darfuris have been
newly displaced in the first four and a half months of 2013**,* an estimate
first reported by *Radio Dabanga on May 16, 2013*, a week before other news
sources:

"In its latest report, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (OCHA) confirms that more than *300,000 people* have been forcibly
displaced in Darfur since the beginning of this year. It attributes the
displacement to inter-tribal fighting and conflict between the Sudanese
Armed Forces (SAF) and armed rebel movements."

[In this brief, numbers (including for mortality), names, dates, and
locations are in *bold* throughout; *italics* are used for emphasis, which
has always been added in quotations; spelling, transliteration, and the
punctuation of quotations have often been regularized for clarity.  I have
also continued to use the division of Darfur into three states: West,
South, and North Darfur states.  This division is preserved in the highly
detailed UN Field Atlases for Darfur: *http://www.sudanreeves.org/?p=3938* ]

It is worth noting a peculiar use of this staggering figure for human
displacement, by both *Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon* and *OHCA head
Valerie Amos, *in comparing it with the *previous two years*:

"The United Nations estimates that *300,000 people* have fled fighting in
all of Darfur in the *first five months of this year*, which is *more than
the total number of people displaced in the last two years put together*,"
Amos said [in Khartoum]." (*Agence France-Presse* [*Khartoum], May 24, 2013*
]

The statistical claim here is highly dubious, as the data collated here
suggest (see *Section One* below).  And to the extent the claim is meant to
suggest that *2011 *and *2012 *were not years of extraordinary levels of
violence and displacement, this was simply disingenuous.

Moreover, displacement continues at a shocking rate: even subsequent to the
*mid-May *figure reported by OCHA, *tens of thousands of additional people**
 have been displaced.*  Nor does the Secretary-General or any other voice
of consequence in the international community offer meaningful and
realistic proposals for halting this displacement, which over the past ten
years has correlated highly with mortality.  Indeed, the UN Department of
Peacekeeping Operations has done nothing to signal that it plans to change
course in beginning to draw down the *UN/African Union Mission in Darfur
(UNAMID)*, which has a UN Security Council mandate to protect
civilians—including from displacement.

In their comparisons, the Secretary-General and OCHA chief appear to be
continuing a pattern that has been evident since UNAMID first took up its
civilian protection mandate (*January 1, 2008*), *viz.,* trying to
overstate previous "successes" in the face of ongoing catastrophe.  But
UNAMID's inability to provide civilian and humanitarian protection has been
conspicuous from the beginning, and was all too continuous with that of the
preceding and grossly inadequate *African Union Mission in Sudan (AMIS)*,
UNAMID's primary source of men and equipment early on.  There is simply no
sign that violent displacement will end or even diminish, or that aerial
bombardments of civilians—rarely investigated by UNAMID—will cease to be a
primary agency of human displacement, despite the wildly mendacious
protestations of the Khartoum regime:

*"'It is absolutely not true that the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) bombed
civilian targets in the two regions,* *or in any other areas of Sudan*,'
said on Thursday [May 30, 2013] foreign ministry spokesperson, Abu Bakar
Al-Siddiq." (*Sudan Tribune*, May 31, 2013)

[ I will soon be updating *“They Bombed Everything that Moved”: Aerial
Military Attacks on Civilians and Humanitarians in Sudan, 1999 –
2011*(analysis and bibliography of sources, 80+ pages with
accompanying Excel
spreadsheet, at *www.sudanbombing.org*); analysis and data spreadsheet
previously updated June 5, 2012.  *More than 2,000 such aerial attacks on
civilians and humanitarians have been authoritatively reported since 1999.*
 ]

*Section One *below offers the data and reports—from the UN,
non-governmental organizations, and news reports—that support the following
summary of findings about human displacement in Darfur over the past six
and a half years:

*2007:                         300,000 *civilians newly displaced

*2008:                         317,000 *civilians newly displaced

*2009:                         250,000* civilians newly displaced

*2010:                         300,000* civilians newly displaced

*2011:                         200,000* civilians newly displaced

*2012:                         150,000* civilians newly displaced

*2013:                        320,000 *civilians newly displaced as of June
1, 2013

*The total for civilians newly displaced, 2007 – June 2013, is more than 1.8
million.*

This figure is itself greater than the total number of IDPs, for all years,
promulgated most often by OCHA (*1.4 million*); and of course the figure of
*1.8 million *does not include the figures for the years of greatest
displacement, *2003 – 2006*.  At the *end of 2008*, according to OCHA's
last *Darfur Humanitarian Profile (No. 34),* there were* 2.7 million people
*in displaced persons camps.

There is glaring, finally shocking statistical incoherence here.  Whatever
over-count is reflected in the OCHA figure for the *end of 2008*; whatever
duplication has been generated by the fact that displacement figures do not
disaggregate those displaced for the first time and those who have been
displaced multiple times (and on each occasion been counted as "newly
displaced"); whatever the ambiguity of status for many who live in the
camps but attempt to work their lands; and whatever the highly limited
success of the UN push for "returns" of IDPs to their lands and homes—none
of this can possibly obscure the basic statistical fact represented here:
there are clearly a great many more than *2 million *Darfuris
*presently* internally
displaced; and—according to *Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans
Frontières (MSF)* and *UNHCR*—there are also *330,000* Darfuri refugees in
eastern Chad (as well as a significant Darfuri refugee population in
Central African Republic).

There is something deeply, disturbingly inaccurate about the figure for
displacement that OCHA promulgates, and that news services, for the most
part, simply repeat.  OCHA sometimes acknowledges in its reports that *another
300,000* people are in the IDP camps, but not being fed by the UN World
Food Program.  It is quite unclear why not being fed by WFP makes a person
any less displaced.  But even the figure of *1.7 million* is not as great
as the figure for those newly displaced since *2007*—again, more than *1.8
million*.  And this of course says nothing about those who remain displaced
from *before 2007.*

*Section One *(below) provides detailed accounts of sources for the data
summarized above, as well as explanations of inferences and representative
accounts of particular episodes of displacement.  I offer as well some
thoughts about why the UN has distorted this most basic reality in Darfur
today.  *Section Two* looks at the lives of displaced persons from the
standpoint of health and malnutrition reports, as humanitarian relief aid
continues to shrink amidst growing insecurity.  *Section Three* looks at
reports of attacks on displaced persons attempting to return to their lands
and homes, the violent means of intimidation deployed, and other factors
limiting the civilian "returns" that the UN disingenuously celebrates.

*SECTION ONE: Human displacement in Darfur*

Here are the data totals for the years* since 2007*:

• *Displacement for 2007: *OCHA estimated that *more than 300,000 Darfuris
were newly displaced* (UN OCHA, Darfur Humanitarian Profile No. 30:
conditions as of January 1, 2008; *
http://reliefweb.int/report/sudan/sudan-darfur-humanitarian-profile-no-30-situation-01-jan-2008
*

• *Displacement for 2008:* OCHA estimated that *317,000 Darfuris were newly
displaced;* (UN OCHA, Darfur Humanitarian Profile No. 34: conditions as of
January 1, 2009; *
http://reliefweb.int/report/sudan/sudan-darfur-humanitarian-profile-no-34-situation-01-jan-2009
**  *

By the end of *2008*, OCHA estimated that* 2.7 million *Darfuris were
internally displaced; this did not include the more than *250,000* Darfuri
refugees then in *eastern Chad.   **
http://reliefweb.int/report/sudan/sudan-darfur-humanitarian-profile-no-34-situation-01-jan-2009
** *

• *Displacement for* *2009*: In this year of humanitarian expulsions, OCHA
promulgated no figure of its own, indeed ended publication of its data-rich
"Darfur Humanitarian Profiles."  But data were still being collected:
the *Canadian
"Peace Operations Monitor"* found evidence suggesting that "*over 214,000
people* were newly displaced [in Darfur] *between January and June
[2009]* alone."
(*http://pom.peacebuild.ca/SudanRelief.shtml*)

Given the reports of violent displacement that followed June 2009, a total
figure for the year of* 250,000 *seems conservative.

• *Displacement for 2010*: the* Internal Displacement Monitoring
Centre *collected
data suggesting that approximately *270,000 people* were newly displaced in
Darfur (*http://tinyurl.com/n6fzjx*).  This figure was last updated on *January
4, 2011*, and thus is highly unlikely to have taken full account of the
large-scale displacement of Decemb*er 2010*. The OCHA Sudan Bulletin (*January
7 – 13, 2011*) reported that the "overall number of people displaced during
the Decem*ber 2010 *fighting in the area of Khor Abeche stands at *43,000."*

*300,000* newly displaced* *for the year again seems a conservative figure;

• *Displacement for 2011: *There is no aggregation of the data, and what
data there are cannot be considered adequate to measure the full scale of
displacement; but various reports suggest that the scale of displacement
certainly did not diminish dramatically, and may well have increased
significantly in eastern regions of Darfur following the defection of *Minni
Minawi* and his *Sudan Liberation Army (SLA/MM)* fighters from the Khartoum
regime in *late 2010*:

§* UN IRIN (Nairobi) reports, March 16, 2011:*

*"Tens of thousands of people continue to flee* their homes in Sudan's
western region of Darfur for the safety of internally displaced people's
camps after recent fighting between government forces and armed militias.
According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
(OCHA), an estimated* 66,000 IDPs *have arrived in camps in* North and
South Darfur since January*. *At least 53,000* are in and around *North
Darfur State's Zam Zam IDP Camp*."

[These OCHA figures almost certainly do not include the many *Zaghawa*
displaced
in *eastern Darfur*; see *"Forgotten Darfur: Old Tactics and New Players"
(below)].*

§  Radio Dabanga *[Nertiti, West Darfur], 24 July 2011:*
*Twenty families fled* from *Nertiti camp* to *Zalingei camp in West Darfur*,
after repeated attacks by militias. Coordinator of the Zalingei camps, told
Radio Dabanga *from camp Hamidiya, that** new displacements are being
caused by militia attacks*, as well as by members of the uniformed
services. These attacks include sexual assault and abuses at farms. He told
Radio Dabanga, that, this month, the two camps (north and south) near the
city of* Nertiti, have seen armed militias take over in the territory of
the displaced. *§

§*  Tens of Thousands flee violence from the air and on the ground North
Darfur *Radio Dabanga,* June 1, 2011*

The aerial bombardments, killings and rapes have caused a reported *140,000
people* to flee for safety *since mid-December*. The fighting in December
already caused *40,000 *people to flee from their homes*. Since January*,
an additional *83,000* newly arrived IDPs have been reported at *Zam Zam
camp*, and another *15,000* in camps near *Nyala, Tawila *and *Khor Abeche*.
Shortage in food, water and fuel increase humanitarian suffering in the
camps, where there is a *sharp increase in deaths among children and
infants since April*. The renewed fighting began after the Sudanese
government severed ties with the Sudan Liberation Army rebel faction loyal
to Minni Minawi (SLA-MM). The bombardments and fighting is mainly located
in the area of east Jebel Marra.  §

§  *from **Small Arms Survey, "Forgotten Darfur: Old Tactics and New
Players," *Claudio Gramizzi and Jérôme Tubiana, *July 2012*

*Late 2010 and the first half of 2011* saw a significant offensive by the
Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) and militias, backed by airstrikes and aerial
bombardments, *targeting both rebel groups and the Zaghawa civilian
population across a broad swathe of eastern Darfur*. Significantly, the
Government of Sudan has partly shifted away from using Arab proxy militias
only to rely on newly formed (and newly armed) non-Arab proxies. *This
development has fundamentally changed the ethnic map of eastern Darfur*,
drawing on previously latent tensions between non-Arab groups over land,
ethnicity, and local political dominance—*and generating some of the most
significant ethnically directed violence since the** start of the conflict
in 2003.*  §

*NB:* There is little evidence that the UN or UNAMID took any statistical
account of the displacement that resulted from Khartoum's new orchestration
of ethnically-targeted violence in eastern Darfur.

In light of the evidence and reports presented here, the most reasonable
estimate for *2011*—based on inadequate data, inadequate because the UN and
UNAMID refuse to collect it—is approximately *200,000 newly displaced, *again
a conservative estimate.

• *Displacement for 2012: *Again, there is no detailed aggregation of data
that I am aware of that looks with any specificity at violence that
displaced or killed civilians in *2012.*

[ In fact, mortality data and quantification have long been a taboo subject
concerning the Darfur conflict, even as the extant data suggested that
in *August
2010* some *500,000 people* had already died from violence as well as the
disease and malnutrition that have come in the wake of the violence (*
http://www.sudanreeves.org/?p=2269*).  Khartoum's evident sensitivities
over any discussion or release of data on the subject have produced a
complete silence. ]

With respect to displacement, the UN appears content with a figure of *90,000
– 100,000* newly displaced civilians for the year *2012*.  I believe this
significantly understates the scale of displacement for the year and offer
here a compendium of reports that must figure in any accounting:

[ *Section Two*, which follows, includes relevant excerpts bearing on the
threats that the displaced encounter—both in flight and in the camps—as
well indications of mortality among the displaced.  *Section Three* examines
the fearsome dangers encountered by displaced persons—overwhelmingly from
the African/non-Arab tribal groups of Darfur—on attempting to reclaim their
homes and lands. ]

§ * UNAMID: alleged air strikes cause displacement North Darfur *(Radio
Dabanga [el-Fasher] *21 December 2012*)

A press statement issued by UNAMID on Friday, 21 December, claims that the
Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) have allegedly carried out air strikes in *Shangil
Tobaya *and* Tawila* localities, North Darfur. It was added that UNAMID
deployed a patrol to Dalma and Dady villages to verify the reported air
strikes in the area, but was *denied access by SAF.* The statement said
that UNAMID received reports of an *increased number of displacements of
civilians from** Daly, Kotto, Msaleet, Nomaira, Dawa Sharafa, Dolma and
Hemaida villages *in* Shangil Tobaya *area.  §

[Other reports received by Radio Dabanga indicated] that civilians
*from Kunjura,
Hashaba, Namira and Masal villages have fled to Argo camp in Tawila area* as
a result of air strikes allegedly carried out by SAF on *18 December 2012.*
  §

§  *Displaced present demands to UNHCR *(Radio Dabanga [*Zam Zam Camp]
December 13, 2012*)

Displaced, sheikhs, omdas and camp’s representatives from Zam Zam, North
Darfur, presented a package of demands and needs to the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees that was visiting the site, an activist told
Radio Dabanga…. On the same day, the UNHCR representative and other
humanitarian organizations spoke to *about 1,350 displaced persons arrived
from East Jebel Marra to Zam Zam, *the activist said.  §

§*  1,000 people flee Sigili *(Radio Dabanga *[Sigili], November 10, 2012*)

About *1,000 people, or 140 families, from Sigili in Shawa area, North
Darfur**,* have *reportedly fled their village following the* *militia
attack that left 13 people dead* last Friday, 2 November, locals told Radio
Dabanga.  According to sources, virtually all inhabitants left the Shawa
area and are moving to El-Fasher and to Zam Zam camp, they explained to
Radio Dabanga on Thursday, 8 November. *In addition, reports concerning a
new imminent attack in Sigili by a militia based in Kalimandou, have also
influenced the large displacement of residents, according to witnesses.*  §

§  *280 displaced families arrive at Zam Zam *(Radio Dabanga* [Zam Zam
camp], December 7, 2012*)

An activist from *Zam Zam camp near El-Fasher, North Darfur, announced that
280 families from East Jebel Marra have arrived at the camp* on Friday,* 7
December.* He asserted these families are *fleeing aerial bombardments and
ground assaults*, in addition to the looting of thousands carried out by
pro-government militias around East Jebel Marra one week ago. *Many of the
individuals are in poor health after walking for seven days to reach the
camp.* §

§*  More than 12,000 fled Hashaba (*Radio Dabanga *[Hashaba], October 19,
2012*)

Residents from *Hashaba, North Darfur,* estimate that between *12 and 13
thousand people have fled the area due to recent attacks**,* Radio Dabanga
was informed on Friday, 19 October. *They described the region as
"virtually deserted"* after the militia attacks and aerial bombings last
September. According to witnesses, Hashaba and surrounding areas including *Umm
Laota, Khashim Wadi *and *Tabadiya* are *completely abandoned*…. Sources
added that villages got completely burnt during the recent attacks and that
the situation in the region is now tense, as fear and insecurity dominate
local residents. They said the humanitarian situation in the area is
critical and that it requires urgent intervention.  §

§*  Arrival of more than 2,000 people fled Hashaba attacks *(Radio
Dabanga *[Mellit],
September 30, 2012*)

*More than 2,000 people* who fled the recent attacks around *Hashaba *have
arrived to *Ba'ashim area, north of Mellit, North Darfur*, on Sunday, 30
September, Radio Dabanga was informed. Sources told Radio Dabanga that
these people traveled for three days by foot, hiding around mountains and
valleys when it was light and moving only by night. This way, sources
explained, the victims could avoid being found by pro-government militias
during their journey to *Ba'ashim*. Witnesses said these people are
suffering from fatigue, adding that they barely ate or drank anything
during the three days they traveled.  They added that the* 2,000 people who
arrived in Ba'ashim represent only one fourth of the victims who fled the
Hashaba attacks**.*  According to witnesses accounts, Hashaba and
surrounding villages saw intense aerial bombardments last *Wednesday and
Thursday, 26 and 27 September.* In addition, pro-government militias were
also accused by sources of invading the area during the same period. The
attacks allegedly resulted in *more than 80 people dead or injured around
Hashaba area*, sources told Radio Dabanga.  §

§ * Sudan army and SRF clash, bombs kill 15 *(Radio Dabanga *[East Jebel
Marra], September 19, 2012*)

Heavy clashes between the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) and the Sudan
Revolutionary Front (SRF) took place between *Tabet and Khazan Tinjur, in
East Jebel Marra, North Darfur*, on *Wednesday morning, 19 September,*
according
to witnesses. The amount of fatal victims is not yet known.   *Victims who
fled their villages** in east Tabet due to the SAF bombings* informed Radio
Dabanga on Wednesday that the Sudanese army is carrying out a retaliation
campaign against them. They claimed to having been beaten, insulted and
humiliated, adding that many were also arrested. Residents also said that
their conditions are dire, as they have no water or food….

On *Tuesday, 18 September, 13 people died *in two separate incidents took
place between *Zam Zam* and *Tabet*. Radio Dabanga was informed that both
accidents were caused by bombs dropped by the SAF. On *Wednesday, September
19 *witnesses affirmed that *SAF bombings killed a nine-year-old girl* and
left her mother in critical condition. They said Suad Bakr Hamid and her
mother, Khadija Omar Mohammed Issa, were hit when traveling from their farm
to their home in El-Kunjar, north of Tabet, on a horse cart. *Another
farmer was killed by an SAF bomb** while working in his land* in the same
area, Radio Dabanga has learned.

The aerial bombardments in East Jebel Marra led to a *new wave of civilian
displacement* from cities and villages to IDP camps, *camps leaders from
Dali *and* Rwanda* told Radio Dabanga. They said that *87 families* arrived
in their camps, located in *Tawila locality*, between Saturday and
Wednesday this week. The leaders pointed out that people are coming from
the villages of *Goz Duru, Timo, Derty *and* Argo* in East Jebel Marra. In
addition, they said the condition of these families is critical.  §

§  *Hundreds displaced due to bombings in North Darfur (*Radio Dabanga [*Jebel
Marra], August 6, 2012*)

*Hundreds were displaced from east Jebel Mara** to Tawila locality,* North
Darfur. According to a witness, this is the result of the Sudanese Armed
Forces' (SAF) intensive *bombing on east Jebel Mara* throughout the week.* *A
source informed Radio Dabanga that *residents from the villages of Arosha,
Hijer, Deloomi, Humeda, Sabi, Wadi Mora, *and *Tangarara were moved to
Tawila locality in North Darfur*. One of the fugitives said that *dozens of
people, including a large number of women, children and elders, are still
in open fields, forests and valleys. They have no food, no medicine and no
shelter*. He added that after the bombings pro-government militias chased
and dragged the people out of their homes and plundered their livestock.  §

§  *UN: 25,000 displaced by latest unrest in Darfur *(Radio Dabanga [*Kutum],
August 10, 2012*)

*UN reports indicate that the entire population of Kassab IDP camp in North
Darfur has fled as a result of the recent fighting. There were more than
25,000 IDPs in Kassab camp**.* The fighting erupted after a district chief,
Abdelrahman Mohammed Eissa, was shot dead in Kutum during a carjacking
attempt.  Eissa's tribesmen retaliated by killing two displaced persons and
a police officer.  §

§  * Thousands displaced on border of Darfur-South Sudan *(Radio
Tamazuj [*Juba]
July 11, 2012*)

Border clashes and insecurity along the border between Western Bahr El
Ghazal and South Darfur have *affected thousands of people in Raja County,
causing displacement and suffering, *according to the county executive.  §

§*  7,000 flee after government forces raze villages in North Darfur *(Radio
Dabanga [Khartoum],* April 2, 2012*)

More than *7,000 people* have fled their homes in North Darfur after
government forces and militants reportedly burned down their villages last
week. *'7,000 have left the villages of Adam Khatir, Nagojora, Hamid Dilli,
Amar Jadid, Koyo **and Duga Ferro near Donki Hosh *and fled to the
surrounding areas where there is no food, water or shelter,' said a newly
displaced witness to Radio Dabanga from a safe area. 'They attacked us for
three days, from Tuesday until Thursday evening. They burned down five
villages, looted more than 20 and destroyed water wells and pumps,' added
the witness. §

§*  3,000 displaced in North Darfur *(Radio Dabanga [Khartoum],* March 27,
2012*)

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the UN said on Monday that
about *3,000 people from the areas of Dar Es Salam and Zam Zam camps in
North Darfur have been displaced to Kalimdo* and other areas with El
Fasher. The FAO said that the displaced people are in need aid, food and
medicines.  §

§*  Heavy shelling forces villagers out of homes in North Darfur *(Radio
Dabanga [*North Darfur], March 15, 2012*)

Heavy shelling took place across *five villages in North Darfur* forcing
residents to flee from their homes. Witnesses said an *Antonov plane bombed
the villages of** Dika, Bain, Keda, Jok *and* Senagarai over the past three
days* and is still circling the area. They said planes dropped more than 40
bombs as ground troops in six tanks and 150 vehicles moved in to the
villages beating male residents, looting and burning houses. The soldiers
also reportedly raped more than 30 women and girls and arrested ten of the
men. Witnesses said *villagers fled to Wadi Maghrib in the desert area
where they are now surrounded by government forces.** * §

§  *1,500 displaced need food assistance in El Daein *(Radio Dabanga *[El
Daein], March 6, 2012*)

*1,500 displaced people from the villages of Uzban, Um Kurkut, Keiluk in
northeast Darfur**, *are experiencing severe lack of access to food in
el-Daein, East Darfur.* The group consisting mainly of women, children and
the elderly, arrived in el-Daein in February last year**.* A witness told
Radio Dabanga the World Food Programme distributed tarpaulins and tents for
the displaced, and promised them food which is yet to materialise.  §

§*  Abu Delik displaced families seeking refuge at UNAMID HQ *(Radio
Dabanga [*Zam Zam camp], February 29, 2012*)

*120 families displaced from Abu Delik,* the area that witnessed heavy
fighting last week, and an adjacent area *Sag Al Nagam *have refused to
leave the UN/African Union Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) headquarters, in Zam
Zam internally displaced persons (IDP) camp, near El Fasher. Newly
displaced families were reportedly attacked by Abu Tira forced on arrival
to the camp… The witness said there are *60 families *currently seeking
protection inside UNAMID's HQ, and *160 families* have been staying just
outside the base since Tuesday. He noted that the *new IDPs are mainly
children, women and the elderly, *and added that *Zam Zam is experiencing
an daily influx of IDPs traveling on foot and donkey.  *§

§ * Government forces storm village near El Fasher *(Radio Dabanga [*Abu
Delik], February 24, 2012*)

On Thursday, government forces attacked  Abu Delik village, southeast of
el-Fasher in North Darfur, killing one person and injuring six
others…. Eyewitnesses
said the force stormed the area at 10:00am *indiscriminately attacking,
beating, and abusing villagers*, who had welcomed the soldiers into the
area. They said the troops killed a man, named as Salih Adam El Daw, and
injured six others. *The soldiers looted homes and shops before burning
some of them down. Many residents fled the area.  *§

Perhaps the most remarkable statement concerning displacement in Darfur
came the previous year from the *Humanitarian Protection Strategy *section
of the UN/AU mission in August 2011:

§  *400,000 displaced in West Jebel Marra; region needs urgent humanitarian
aid* (Radio Dabanga *[Jebel Marra], August 16, 2011:*

*Nearly 400,000 people have been displaced in West Jebel Marra areas, the
Humanitarian Protection Strategy of the United Nations African Mission in
Darfur (UNAMID) said on Tuesday.* "The assessments so far conducted confirm
that approximately 400,000 people are displaced in Jebel Marra area," said
Oriano Micaletti, head of the UNAMID Humanitarian Protection Strategy. *“They
have received very limited assistance during the last few years and are in
urgent need of humanitarian aid." *There is an urgent need for humanitarian
aid according to the Humanitarian Protection Strategy of the Mission.  §

There is no evidence that this extraordinarily large figure is included in
UN calculations about total human displacement in Darfur; indeed,
statements by former UN/AU joint special representative Ibrahim Gambari
would seem almost pointedly to ignore this finding when he was busy
trumpeting his successful accomplishments as JSR last summer before leaving
UNAMID.

It should be emphasized that in the absence of any meaningful security
provisions for Darfur, fighting between Arab tribal groups has also
dramatically increased displacement in recent years, and Arab groups make
up a much greater percentage of the total displaced population.

• *Displacement for 2012: *The total for* 2012 *suggested by the reports
above—far from complete and with many offering no estimates of numbers
displaced—appears to be *between 150,000 and 200,000*.  Moreover, the
character and consequences of displacement are certainly much more fully
represented in these dispatches than in any recent UN or UNAMID accounts.
I include in calculations for total displacement a figure of *150,000
displaced for 2012*, but accept that it is only a crude estimate, based
chiefly on calculations of displacement during the episodes presented
above.  If this figure is even approximately accurate, given the
displacement estimate for 2011 (*approximately 200,000*), it is not true,
as claimed by Amos and Ban, that the figure of *300,000* "exceeds the total
for the preceding two years"—*2011 and 2012.*

Accepting the UN figure of *300,000 *newly displaced in 2013, and
aggregating the other figures offered here for human displacement in Darfur
from *2007 to the present,* yields a ghastly total of approximately *1.8
million human beings newly displaced*.  This is a figure greater than the
current UN figure for* total *current displacement in all of Darfur, i.e.,
those displaced *before and after 2007.*

Whatever qualifications must be made for double-counting (i.e., those
people who have been displaced more than once), temporary displacement (the
30,000 people at Kassab camp displaced in August 2012 returned to this
insecure location within a matter of weeks following brutal attacks),
whatever (highly limited) success there has been in returning IDPs to their
lands and homes, such a vast figure incinerates the credibility of people
such as Joint AU/UN Special Representatives Aichatu Mindaoudou, who—with
former JSR Rodolphe Adada and Ibrahim Gambari—has taken her place in a
continuing spectacle of mendacity.  For on the basis of almost no
understanding of Darfur, Ms. Mindaoudou very recently joined her
predecessors in offering a culpably distorted characterization of Darfur,
declaring last month that "*the numbers of people affected by violence had
decreased each year between 2008 and 2011." * Such lies ensure that
Darfur's crisis will continue to intensify, and its suffering will be
rendered even less visible.

Moreover, all signs are that large-scale human displacement will continue
so long as security remains in free-fall in Darfur (see March 20, 2013
analysis of security conditions at *http://www.sudanreeves.org/?p=3838*).
 Even *since mid-May of this year*, when the UN first promulgated its
figure of 300,000 newly displaced civilians in 2013, there is clear
evidence of substantial, ongoing human displacement:

§ * Gimr-Beni Halba clashes leave 94 dead, 6,500 displaced in South
Darfur *(Radio
Dabanga [*Katayla, South Darfur], May 30, 2013*)

*[The Gimr are one of the smaller non-Arab/African tribal group in South
Darfur—ER]*

Tribal clashes involving the *Gimr* and *Beni Halba* in *South Darfur* have
left a total of 94 people dead and another 65 injured since they resumed in
March in Katayla locality, a Gimr stronghold.* A UN OCHA report released on
Thursday states that an estimated 6,500 people have fled Katayla and have
sought refuge in Tullus*.

Speaking to Radio Dabanga, Gimr spokesman Abkar Al Toum, added that *1,200
houses were torched, five water wells destroyed, 14 villages were set ablaze
* and all the property of the inhabitants stolen.  Al Toum said that 22
Gimr died in attacks on Monday and Tuesday in *Kabba, Butab Abu Bashir, Umm
Gutiya, Kabo, Amud Al Sah, Ati Kena, *and* Ajuekheen*, while 32 were
wounded, of whom 11 were taken to Nyala hospital on Thursday.  §

§  *Central Darfur’s Umm Dukhun "virtually deserted" after clashes
resumed *(Radio
Dabanga [*Umm Dukhun], May 30, 2013*)

*Umm Dukhun city in [formerly West] Darfur, which has witnessed* *renewed
violent tribal clashes between the Salamat and Misseriya tribes*, *was
virtually deserted* as of Thursday morning. In addition, shops and markets
have been closed since hostilities resumed earlier this week.  §

*UN figures on displacement in Darfur*

In the past that both the UN and UNAMID have deliberately distorted and
misrepresented displacement figures, a corruption I have addressed at
several moments in recent years, including:

*•* "How many Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) are there in
Darfur?” *Dissent
Magazine* [on-line], April 28, 2011 *
http://www.dissentmagazine.org/blog/how-many-internally-displaced-persons-are-there-in-darfur
*

*• *Updated, August 31, 2012, with a critical examination of UN statistical
methodology:* **http://www.sudanreeves.org/?p=2320*

Also dismaying is the repeated failure to highlight the total of Darfuri
refugees in eastern Chad, a population that has recently increased
dramatically. There are now *330,000 Darfuri refugees in eastern Chad, a
surge of some 50,000,** *confirmed by both the UN High Commission for
Refugees and *Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)*; the
latter reported from Tissi, eastern Chad (April 26, 2013): “Violent clashes
in Sudan’s Darfur region have driven approximately *50,000 people across
the border into southeastern* *Chad* *since early March* *[2013].*

Even more invisibly, Darfuri refugees continue to suffer in Central African
Republic, thousands of whom were only recently displaced into this
exceedingly remote area:

§  *UNHCR new release, May 31, 2013 (**http://www.unhcr.org/51a8b7756.html*)

The UN refugee agency has established contact with some *3,500 Sudanese
refugees who made their way to northeast Central African Republic after
fleeing inter-tribal conflict in Sudan's Darfur region two months ago.
*Refugees
are presently scattered in the *Birao, Boromata and Roukoutou districts*,
which are difficult to access. UNHCR staff in Central African Republic were
finally able to meet some of the refugees in Birao on *May 23. *The
refugees said their *villages in Am Djeradil district *had been torched
during the clashes in March and many people killed. Some families were also
separated during the confusion, with hundreds heading to *Central African
Republic* and thousands of others crossing the border into southeast Chad.
§

*SECTION TWO: Displacement and Humanitarian Conditions*

The fact that many people in camps are not receiving WFP food rations, or
rations that are shamefully meager, should give pause and raises serious
questions about the competency of WFP, OCHA, and UNAMID.  Most urgently:
why is the international community not being informed about the scale of
deterioration in the humanitarian conditions throughout Darfur?

Certainly a number of the dispatches (below) from particular camps make
painfully clear the severe deprivation that Darfuris are suffering.  Here
it is important to bear in mind that many of the various threats faced by
displaced persons are a function of the rampant insecurity throughout
Darfur, which makes adequate humanitarian response impossible.  Khartoum's
security forces continue to deny access on a regular basis—to both UNAMID
and relief organizations, including those of the UN.  Humanitarian
conditions in the camps are clearly deteriorating rapidly, with food and
clean water in particularly short supply.  This comes just as the heavy
seasonal rains are about to begin, making transport extremely difficult to
many locations. Conditions will become ideal for water-borne diseases; the
rains will also exacerbate the problem of finding clean water and
addressing acute sanitation and hygiene issues.  The potential for
skyrocketing mortality is yet again clearly present.

And reports from Chad indicate that the Darfuri refugees are an
increasingly invisible and under-served population.  The reports are
scattered, but telling:

§  * Serious water shortage in eastern Chad camp; refugees facing threat of
diseases as they use contaminated water from nearby valleys *(Radio Dabanga
*[Brejean, also Bredjing], August 9, 2012*)

Nearly *45,000 Sudanese [Darfuri] refugees from the Brejean camp* (eastern
Chad) are suffering from acute water shortage after the water pump's
generator broke down, residents complained on Tuesday. This has resulted in
refugees traveling to nearby valleys in search of water for drinking and
domestic purposes. The water from the valleys is, however, not suitable for
consumption. Refugees in the camp told Radio Dabanga that the water was
contaminated by both human and animal waste and carcasses leading to the
spread of waterborne diseases, especially among children.  §

§  *Food shortage in eastern Chad camp *(Radio Dabanga [*Eastern Chad],
August 22, 2012*)

*537 Sudanese refugees in eastern Chad's Gaga camp have not received their
food rations since last June*, a sheikh in the camp told Radio Dabanga on
Monday. Sheikh Mohammed Ismail said, *"The United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) has asked the veteran refugees in the camp to share
their food rations with the new arrivals until August, which should have
been the next date for replenishing the food stocks." However, the refugees
were surprised when the UNHCR asked them to prolong that initiative until
October*. The decision was therefore vehemently rejected by the refugees.
Sheikh Mohammed Ismail added, "The new arrivals were registered as refugees
and must receive food on showing their food ration cards."

>From the camps in Darfur itself, Radio Dabanga yet again provides our most
concrete and revealing examples—indeed, in most cases the only examples.
The selection here is representative, but hardly exhaustive.  What is
indisputable is that humanitarian conditions in Darfur have been
deteriorating ever more rapidly over the past year, often for reasons
directly related to insecurity, especially in the transport of food:

§  *22 displaced die in two weeks *(Radio Dabanga, [*Garsila, West Darfur],
October 16, 2012*)

The increasing spread of diseases in *Garsila *camps, West Darfur, led to
the *death of 22 displaced persons in the first* *half of October, camp
representatives told Radio Dabanga, on Tuesday October 16.* A camps' sheikh
told Radio Dabanga that residents of three of *Garsila's camps (Jeddah,
Ardeeba and Jebelain*) are facing critical health conditions as diseases
like malaria, dry cough and diarrhea are spreading rapidly.

He added that mainly children and elderly are suffering.  §

*§  16 deaths in Kendebe camp *(Radio Dabanga [*Kendebe camp] October 8,
2012*)

A *Kendebe camp* activist, in West Darfur, announced that *16 displaced
persons have died in the past few weeks due to different kinds of diseases*,
Radio Dabanga has learned on Sunday,* 7 October*. He explained that many
doctors prescribe medications that must be purchased from the market,
instead of providing it to patients, adding that most displaced cannot
afford buying medicines.  §

§ * Diseases spreading rapidly in Darfur *(Radio Dabanga [*el-Fasher],
September 16, 2012*)

Health Minister of the Darfur Regional Authority, Osman El-Bushra, revealed
the *spread of diseases such as leprosy, scabies, tuberculosis, night
blindness, river blindness, malaria, schistosomiasis and typhoid among the
population of Darfur. He attributes the spread of these diseases to
malnutrition, poverty, a lack of health and therapeutic institutions, and
the deteriorating security situation in the region.*  §

§ * "Catastrophic" medical services in Darfur region *(Radio Dabanga
*[el-Fasher],
September 18, 2012*)

*The Minister of Health from the Darfur Regional Authority, Osman
Al-Bushra, told Radio Dabanga that health and medical services in all five
states of Darfur are "tragic and catastrophic."* The minister stated that
West Darfur, with a population of 1,202,506 inhabitants according to the
last census in 2010, is the state with the worst health conditions in the
region.  §

§ * Starvation in three camps of South Darfur after pull out aid
organizations *(Radio Dabanga [*Nyala], June 22, 2012*)

*Children have died due to malnutrition after aid organizations pulled out
of three camps*,* 40 kilometers outside the South Darfur capital of Nyala*.
Community leaders have urged aid organizations to resume health and food
support in the displaced camps of *Mershing, Manaoshi *and* Duma in South
Darfur*…. *In the past week tens of children and several elderly people
died of to malnutrition*. *The community leader says that starvation is the
result of the aid organizations stopped providing food rations to IDPs for
more than eight months*. He added that since circumstances are increasingly
challenging an insufficient number of health centers near the IDP camps.
Camp leaders told Radio Dabanga that around *60 percent of camp residents
are suffering of continuous hunger*, since food rations were stopped,
forcing some to go for days without a meal.  §

§ * Poor health conditions leave dozens dead in Mornei (*Radio Dabanga
*[Mornei],
September 21, 2012*)

Residents of *Mornei camp in West Darfur* are suffering from poor health
conditions as *diseases like malaria, typhoid and diarrhea are spreading
rapidly*. In addition to the rapidly spreading diseases, the residents
suffer from malnutrition and a lack of health-care and medication. One of
the sheikhs told Radio Dabanga that *the** report [composed by the camp
sheikhs] revealed the death of 64 elderly and 30 children between the ages
of one and five over the past two weeks. *In addition, the report confirmed
that the majority of deaths are a result of diseases like malaria and
typhoid.  §

§  * El Riyadh camp: one medical clinic for 30,000 residents *(Radio
Dabanga *[el-Geneina] August 28, 2012*)

Radio Dabanga was informed today that there is *only one medical clinic
available at the El Riyadh camp in El-Geneina, West Darfur. The camp counts
30,000 residents who claim to face a serious humanitarian crisis*. A camp's
activist told Radio Dabanga that the three most serious issues in El Riyadh
are lack of security, lack of water and lack of medical services. He added
there is also scarcity of nurses and of midwives at the camp. *The source
said this situation arose after June 2011 when the Government of Sudan
expelled medical international humanitarian organizations from the camp. He
explained the international organizations were substituted by the Sudanese
Ministry of Health*.  §

§ * Several camps Darfur do not receive food aid for four months *(Radio
Dabanga [Khartoum], *June 23, 2012*)

*Several camps in North Darfur have not received food aid for several months
*. The ten thousands of internally displaced people (IDP) of Zam Zam-camp
in North Darfur and the camps of *Jeddah *and* El Jebelayn* close to the
town of *Garsila in [formerly West] Darfur*, said the World Food Programme
does not enter the camps anymore to support the families most in need.
Several camps in North Darfur have not received food aid for several
months. A camp leader of Zam Zam tells Radio Dabanga that the *WFP has not
delivered food rations to over 800 poor and malnourished families as it did
in the past*.  §

§ * Six children die from measles in Seraf Umra camps *(Radio Dabanga *[Seraf
Umra, North Darfur], June 6, 2012*)

*Six children have died* from measles in over past week in *Jebel, Dankoj
and El Naseem camps in Seraf Umra in North Darfur*. They expressed deep
concern at the quick spread of diseases in the camp due to the lack of
health care….  §

§ * Six months with no aid for South Darfur camps *(Radio Dabanga [*South
Darfur], June 5, 2012*)

Residents of *Mershing, Manaoshi and Duma camps* for displaced people in
South Darfur have received not humanitarian aid or support for over six
months. Camp leaders told Radio Dabanga that around *60 percent of camp
residents are suffering with continuous hunger*, since food rations were
stopped forcing some to go for days without having a meal. One leader said
they have been complaining for months about the situation with no help
coming from the international community….  §

*§  Sheikh, displaced concerned about food distribution in Darfur camps *(Radio
Dabanga *[Nyala], June 2, 2013*)**

The displaced people of* *Attash [also Otash]* camp near Nyala, *the
capital of South Darfur, have voiced concern about the World Food Programme
(WPF) distribution plans. The *WPF have decided to delegate the
distribution of food to traders, while the displaced would prefer it occur
via the distribution centres established by World Vision, launched on 30
May. The Sheikh of the camp Abdel Karim Abkar, explained to Radio Dabanga
on Saturday that “the displaced base their rejection on their negative
experience in the past with Elbadrain Charity Organization (ECO) which
distributed coupons to be used for grinding corn." *"The owners of mills
later refused to accept the coupons under the pretext that they had not
been not been paid, as a result this led to the collapse of the project,”
he added*. In camp Attash, about 3,200 newly displaced families are
suffering a humanitarian crisis due to the lack of water and health
services.  *§**

§ * Abu Suruj camp: no food aid for six months *(Radio Dabanga [*el-Geneina],
May 28, 2012*)

*Residents of Abu Suruj camp for internally displaced people said they have
not received food aid for more than six months*. Witnesses said the camps
north of El Geneina are reaching a desperate situation and called for the
World Food Programme to immediately intervene and deliver food aid to
people in need of urgent assistance.  §

§ * Jebel Marra residents stranded with no aid access *(Radio Dabanga [*Jebel
Marra] May 27, 2012*)

The coordinator of internally displaced person camps in North Darfur, Ahmed
Atim said the situation of civilians in Jebel Marra is becoming desperate.
He said *civilians are stranded with no access from humanitarian
organisations including the World Food Programme (WFP).*  §

§ * Mornei camp food rations reduced by half *(Radio Dabanga [*Mornei camp]
May 29, 2012*)

Mornay camp residents have complained that *the World Food Programme have
reduced food rations by half**.* A camp leader told Radio Dabanga that the
rations were reduced *without any explanation from the WFP.* He appealed to
the WFP to resume full rations and remember the difficulties facing
displaced people in buying food from the market, amid food shortages and
high prices.  §

§ * WFP: 30 per cent of Darfur threatened with food insecurity *(Radio
Dabanga *[el-Fasher] May 22, 2012*)

The World Food Programme says that *30 percent of the population of Darfur
is threatened with food insecurity and in need of urgent aid*. The
Programme conducted surveys in Darfur finding around 30 percent to be in
need of urgent assistance, said WFP Field Coordinator Adham Mesallami to
Radio Dabanga. He said that families told the WFP about their inability to
cover their daily needs for food.  §

§ * Kassab displaced describe situation as famine *(Radio Dabanga [*Kassab
camp], May 9, 2012*)

Displaced people in Kassab camp in North Darfur have *described their
current condition as 'famine,'* due to the reduction in food provided by
the World Food Programme and the unprecedented high prices of food at the
market. An activist from Kassab told Radio Dabanga *that many families are
now eating berries and nuts as they are unable to survive on the reduced
rations.  *§

§ * WFP reduces rations in El Geneina camps *(Radio Dabanga *[el-Geneina],
May 9, 2012*)

A group of displaced people from 10 camps across El Geneina said the World
Food Programme told them on Monday that *their rations of maize will be
reduced by 50 percent. *They said this have caused widespread discontent in
the camps that are already suffering from food shortages and hunger. A camp
leader that attended the meeting told Radio Dabanga that the *WFP
representatives justified the reduced ration by not being able to transport
the required quantities, as truck drivers are reluctant to move around with
the current security situation*.  §

The future for the children who have known nothing but life in the camps is
grim beyond description, though susceptible of some quantification:

§ * Measles outbreak kills 25 children in Gereida camp *(Radio Dabanga
*[Gereida,
South Darfur], May 4, 2012*)

*At least 25 children have died from measles during a recent outbreak in
Gereida camp* in South Darfur. A camp official said there is a high rate of
infection spreading amongst children. She appealed to humanitarian
organisations, health officials and the World Health Organisation to
immediately act to intervene and stop the disease from spreading and
risking more lives.  §

§* * *75 per cent of Darfur's refugee children show PTSD symptoms; study
conducted by a UK journal says 38 per cent meet clinical criteria for
depression    *(Radio Dabanga, *August 12, 2011*)

*75 per cent of the children in Darfur's refugee camps met diagnostic
criteria for post-traumatic stress disorder* (PTSD), according to an
interview-based study released by *The Lancet*, a UK-based health journal,
on Thursday. The study also concluded that *38 per cent of refugee children
in camps fulfilled clinical symptoms for depression*. The research carried
out by the Oxford-based group is meant to add to information about mental
health issues faced by refugee children.  §

*SECTION THREE: Are there meaningful "returns" of displaced persons in
Darfur?  What guarantees are there that the returns will be safe and
voluntary?*

When addressing the question of displaced persons in Darfur, the UN and
UNAMID inevitably speak of their success in beginning a program of "safe
and voluntary returns."  The claims made are hotly disputed by Darfuris,
and the success stories are often revealed to be shams or, worse, set-ups
for violent confrontation with well-armed Arab group that have
opportunistically seized farms and land; there are continuous reports of
these Arab groups coming from Chad, Niger, Central African Republic, and
even Mali.  Certainly the UN and UNAMID are particularly culpable in
failing to report "returns" that are unsuccessful, often dramatically so.

For such honesty would compromise a narrative that has been relentlessly
and shamelessly promulgated for several years, *viz.,* that safe and
voluntary returns have begun in significant numbers, and that the UN and
African Union have succeeded in Darfur.  But the frequency and detail of
Radio Dabanga reports indicate that the lands of sedentary African/non-Arab
tribal groups displaced by violence remain too dangerous to return to.  The
numbers of "returns" the UN claims—in the tens of thousands and still but a
very small fraction of the number of newly displaced persons—seem to be
based on a counting method that takes little account of the violence that
characteristically returning displaced:

§ * Armed herders burn village of voluntary return in West Darfur *(Radio
Dabanga [*Mesteriha], December 10, 2012*)

*Armed herders have reportedly injured five members of the armed forces and
burnt the village of Ronja for voluntary return as well as two other
villages to the ground*, *destroying crops and around 10 kilometers of
agricultural lands*, sources informed Radio Dabanga on Sunday, *9 December*.
Sources from the area reported that the attacks started on Friday when
farmers informed the police about trespassing of herders onto their
farmlands.  §

§ * Armed group shoots man, expels farmers from land, *(Radio Dabanga
[*Gereida,
South Darfur] June 14, 2012*)

*An armed group of 30 members traveling on horses shot a man and tried to
expel farmers from their land near Gereida in South Darfur.* Witnesses said
the men entered a village and shot Muhannad Yacob from *Al Safa* while he
was tending to his farm. They said Yacob was taken to hospital in Gereida
for treatment. *They added that militias try to take over farmlands
belonging to displaced people as many are still living in the camps,
forgoing the right to their land.  *§

§ * Armed militias seize farms in Kreinik, West Darfur *(Radio Dabanga
*[el-Geneina],
July 8, 2012*)

IDPs returning to their lands in *Kreinik, 36 km east of Geneina*, found
that *their properties had been seized by armed militias.* A sheikh [told
Radio Dabanga that] *IDPs returning to cultivate their lands during the
rainy season in West Darfur were stopped by militias.*  §

Further dispatches from the past year concerning threats to returning
civilians can be found, along with a ***conclusion* to this brief, in ***Part
2: *http://www.sudanreeves.org/?p=4022


Eric Reeves
Smith College
Northampton, MA  01063
       413-585-3326
       [email protected]

*Eric Reeves'* new book-length study of greater Sudan (*Compromising With
Evil: An archival history of greater Sudan, 2007 - 2012*) is available in
eBook format, at no cost:
www.CompromisingWithEvil.org<http://www.compromisingwithevil.org/>


Websites:   www.sudanreeves.org

<http://www.sudanreeves.org/>                 www.sudanbombing.org


www.CompromisingWithEvil.org<http://www.compromisingwithevil.org/>


Skype: ReevesSudan
Twitter: @SudanReeves

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