Wednesday, May 04, 2005

Abandoned Darfur Villages Burned To Terrorize Refugees From Returning


As always I am keeping my eye on that land so many would like to forget, the land containing people of color, a land rapt with disease and hunger. One of the points I see to writing the Mansel Report is to ensure that someone somewhere might read these reports and think differently and see with some clarity that suffering is not democratic or necessary. The following article speaks for itself. – Chris Mansel, The Mansel Report


Abandoned Darfur Villages Burned to Terrorize Refugees From Returning -

UN UN News
Service

(New York) NEWSApril 26, 2005 Posted to the web April 26, 2005

The United Nations refugee agency today voiced alarm that abandoned villages in Sudan's conflict-ravaged western Darfur region are once again being burned as a message of terror to discourage people who once lived there from returning home.
"This gratuitous act is clearly a message to the former residents not to return home," UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) spokesperson Jennifer Pagonis told a news briefing in Geneva of an agency visit last week to the village of Seraf, near Masteri, some 60 kilometres south of El Geneina, capital of West Darfur state.
"We are concerned because acts like this - on top of the displacement of some 2 million people from their homes - threaten to change the social and demographic structure of Darfur irrevocably," she added.
Ibrahim, a resident of Seraf, took UNHCR staff for an on-site inspection of the village, which he said had been burned to the ground four days earlier by men he called Arabs or Janjaweed militias.
"They are telling us not to come back to our original village," Ibrahim told agency staffers. "They want to push us to go to Chad, out of the country. They want to stay here instead of us."
Some 200,000 Sudanese have fled across the border into Chad, beyond the more than more than 1.8 million displaced inside Darfur by the conflict, which began two years ago when rebels took up arms partly in protest at the distribution of economic resources but has since been compounded by Janjaweed and other armed attacks on villages.
"It is a dramatic way of making the point they (the original inhabitants) are not welcome here," said a UNHCR staffer, who accompanied Ibrahim. Last year during Ramadan, the Islamic holy month from October to November, some 55 abandoned villages were burned around Masteri, an agglomeration of nearly 100 villages.
Actions like these also demonstrate the value of UNHCR's mobile protection teams, which have conducted more than 100 missions within West Darfur to find and arrange protection for the most vulnerable people, especially women who have been raped, Ms. Pagonis said.
"We are working to improve life for those who do choose to go home to selected areas, although we do not want to send the signal that it is now safe for all Darfuris to return home," she added. Some 20,000 people have already taken the brave step of going back to their villages from Chad and from larger towns in Darfur.

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