New Straits Times

SUDAN REFUGEES TRYING TO SURVIVE IN CHAD

In the past year, 571,000 refugees have entered Chad to flee civil war in Sudan

- KOUFROUN (Chad)

AYEAR after civil war erupted again in Sudan, Alabaki Abbas Ishag, 24, has been surviving in a makeshift border refugee camp in Chad for a month.

Ishag is one of 8.5 million people displaced by fighting between Sudan’s regular army and paramilita­ries. He managed to reach the Chadian border village of Koufroun after going into hiding for almost a year, escaping the massacres in Sudan’s western region of Darfur, the scene of violence since the 2000s.

He went from the ruins of one house to another in El-Geneina, West Darfur’s capital 20km from the border.

War broke out on April 15 last year between the regular army of Sudan’s de facto leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) of his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo.

In El-Geneina alone, 10,000 to 15,000 people were killed during the first nine months of the war, according to the United Nations.

The RSF “tried to recruit me to take part in the massacres, but when I refused, they put me on a list of people to be executed”, said Ishag. “I saw them throw people I knew into mass graves and bury them alive. When there were a lot of bodies, the RSF would pile them up like rubbish before setting fire to them.”

Now in Koufroun, the young man can sometimes earn some money at the local market. He eats one meal every other day.

But the looming rainy season is another cause for worry.

“I have nothing to build myself a shelter with,” Ishag said, pointing to the straw mats used as a roof for him and the more than 9,100 refugees in Koufroun, according to UN figures.

Chad is home to almost a million Sudanese refugees — more

than any other country.

In the past year, more than 571,000 Sudanese refugees have rushed to Chad on foot or by mule, adding to the more than 400,000 others who fled the previous war in Darfur in 2003.

More than 160,000 new refugees are crammed in a camp in the border town of Adre, the main entry point for those fleeing across the border.

Hada Ishag Fadallah, 56, arrived in Adre with her seven children in early November.

“RSF came into our house and shot my husband before stealing everything they could, while others beat us,” Fadallah said, echoing scenes reported by other survivors in Adre.

Women and children account for almost 90 per cent of the Sudanese refugees who have arrived over the past year.

A month ago, the UN World Food Programme warned it would suspend aid to Sudanese refugees in Chad in April due to a lack of funds, appealing for donations to “avoid a total catastroph­e”.

“The rations they give us for a month last 20 days at most,”

Fadallah said. “I have to take my two eldest children, aged 9 and 14, to work with me whenever I can find a way to make a bit of money, washing clothes or making bricks.”

For months, her family has been eating a bowl of sorghumbas­ed porridge once a day.

In Farchana, some 40km from the border, 42,000 refugees are crammed together.

Young farmer Hamra Adam Mohammed proudly shows off a small house made of brick and earth that she built on her own in two months. Thieves had cut away her tarpaulin and stolen the belongings from her first shelter.

She warns of growing tensions with Chadian residents.

“There isn’t enough water or food for everyone,” she said.

The region’s governor complains of a lack of internatio­nal action.

“There are more and more outbursts, and we’ve asked for more gendarmes,” said Bachar Ali Souleymane. “When we see the humanitari­an attention in Ukraine or Palestine, we feel like we’ve been forgotten.”

 ?? AFP PIC ?? A man walking at a market at the Adre refugee camp in Chad recently. Chad is home to the largest number of Sudanese refugees, nearly a million.
AFP PIC A man walking at a market at the Adre refugee camp in Chad recently. Chad is home to the largest number of Sudanese refugees, nearly a million.

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