‘Sudan an atrocities laboratory,’ UN aid chief tells Berlin conference

Humanitarian affairs chief, Tom Fletcher, has said “Sudan is an atrocities laboratory”, with the killings of civilians and aid workers.
The humanitarian chief also cited sieges of cities such as El Fasher in Darfur, the denial of food, the use of sexual violence as a weapon of war, and the targeting of schools and hospitals.
Fletcher told the Foreign ministers from across the world, meeting in Berlin on Wednesday, to show support for Sudan, where a fourth year of brutal warfare has begun as humanitarian needs deepen.
Countries reportedly pledged over $1 billion at the third International Conference for Sudan co-hosted by Germany, the African Union, the European Union, France, and the United Kingdom.
“Drones have killed 700 people just this year, and 130 humanitarians have been killed over three years,” he stated. “I often have to call the families of those who died, and they always ask, ‘Did our family members die in vain?’”
The war that erupted exactly three years ago to the day between the Sudanese Armed Forces and former allies, the Rapid Support Forces, has created the world’s worst humanitarian and displacement crises.
Roughly 34 million people, two-thirds of the population, require humanitarian assistance. Nearly 14 million people have been displaced, 19 million are going hungry, and some 10 million children are out of school.
“The Middle East conflict is adding a layer to this challenge,” Fletcher said, pointing to rising costs for food and fuel, as well as freight, which is up 25 per cent. Half of Sudan’s fertiliser comes from the Gulf, and we’re approaching the main growing season in April and May,” he added.
The UN and partners are seeking $2.2 billion to reach 14 million people across the country this year, within an overall target of 20 million.
He restated the need to “keep access routes open”, referring to the Adre border crossing from eastern Chad, critical for aid delivery to millions in the Darfur region, while calling for more safe routes into the Kordofans and Blue Nile state.
“We’ve got to expand our footprint in Darfur,” he added, noting that 93 staff are now in the region, a threefold increase since October.
(NAN)
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