We started out in the capital N’Djamena, where I celebrated my birthday with the assessment team members and also with my friend from grad school Simeon who is working there as a nutritionist.
We spent most of our time in the eastern part of the country which borders Darfur, and shares many commonalities with that part of Sudan, such as the topography, some of the people groups, desertification, a rapidly shrinking water table, tension between “arab” nomadic pastoralists and sedentary farmers, and unfortunately, political conflict.
Access to the 12 refugee camps that house the 230,000 Darfuri refugees can be difficult because of security, but we were able to visit Gaga camp 1 ½ hours out of Abéché. Thanks to its relative accessibility, this could be considered the “Hilton” of the refugee camps, with a good medical clinic, sufficient water, access to some agricultural land and basic veterinary services for those refugees lucky enough to still have animals.
But don’t get the wrong idea, this is still a refugee camp, and most of the people living here lost everything they had when the fled their homeland. It was heartening that in spite of the difficult life, the people were friendly and welcoming, and the children especially, were excited to see us!
Four members of our team (not including me) spent some time in the refugee camp and IPD (internally displaced people) settlements farther south in the Goz Beida area. They visited the village from which some of the IPDs originated, which had been attacked and burned to the ground just after the harvest last October. 40 men of the 2,500 inhabitants were killed, some of the women were taken away for several days and abused, and all the animals and harvested grain were stolen. The villagers said the attackers were “Janjawit” (armed men on horses) from
Insecurity is caused by the presence of a number of armed groups who attack at will: Chadian rebels trying to overthrow the government, who are sometimes allied with Darfuri rebel groups, “Janjawit” who could be Sudanese or Chadian, and bandits.
The IDPs for the most part are worse off than the refugees, since they do not receive consistent assistance. IDPs technically are the responsibility of national governments, and in the absence of forthcoming assistance from the latter, it is not always clear who should step in with a mandate to look after them. This is a gap that our team identified and we hope that we will be able to step in and help to fill this gap.
Photos by David Lynn: Girls getting water from a borehole and man drinking filthy water from an unprotected well.
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