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Refugee Crisis Grows as Darfur
War Crosses a Border
By Lydia Polgreen
February 28, 2006.-(New York Times). The chaos in Darfur, the war-ravaged
region in Sudan where more than 200,000 civilians have been killed,
has spread across the border into Chad, deepening one of the world's
worst refugee crises.Arab gunmen from Darfur have pushed across
the desert and entered Chad, stealing cattle, burning crops and
killing anyone who resists. The lawlessness has driven at least
20,000 Chadians from their homes, making them refugees in their
own country.
Hundreds of thousands more people in this area, along with 200,000
Sudanese who fled here for safety, find themselves caught up in
a growing conflict between Chad and Sudan, which have a long history
of violence and meddling in each other's affairs.
"You may have thought the terrible situation in Darfur couldn't
get worse, but it has," Peter Takirambudde, executive director
of the Africa division of Human Rights Watch, said in a recent statement.
"Sudan's policy of arming militias and letting them loose is
spilling over the border, and civilians have no protection from
their attacks, in Darfur or in Chad."Indeed, the accounts of
civilians in eastern Chad are agonizingly familiar to those in western
Sudan. One woman, Zahara Isaac Mahamat, described how Arab men on
camels and horses had raided her village in Chad, stealing everything
they could find and slaughtering all who resisted.The dead included
her husband, Ismail Ibrahim, who tried to prevent the raiders from
burning his sorghum and millet fields. Like so many others in this
desolate expanse of dust-choked earth, she fled west with her three
children, much as people in Darfur have been forced to do in recent
years."I have lost everything but my children," she said,
her face looking much older than her 20 years. She is now a refugee,
with thousands of other displaced Chadians, in Kolloye, a village
south of here."We have three bowls of grain left," she
said. "When that is gone, only God can help us."
The spreading chaos is a result of two closely connected conflicts
in the neighboring countries. In Darfur, rebels have been battling
government forces and the janjaweed, Arab militias aligned with
the government, in a campaign of terror that the Bush administration
has called genocide. The United Nations Security Council has agreed
to send troops to protect civilians, but they will take months to
arrive. In the meantime, President Bush has said, NATO should help
shore up a failing African Union peacekeeping mission there, but
a surge of violence has chased tens of thousands of people from
their homes in recent weeks.
In Chad, the government is fighting its own war against rebels
based in Sudan and bent on ousting Chad's ailing president, Idriss
Déby.
The rebels include disgruntled soldiers who defected and tribes
tired of being ruled by members of the president's tribe, the Zaghawa,
who represent just a small percentage of the population but have
long dominated politics and the military. In a sign of how inseparable
the two conflicts have become, President Déby has accused
Sudan of supporting the rebellion against his government, and Sudan
has long suspected members of Mr. Déby's family of supporting
Zaghawa-led rebels in Darfur.Both sides agreed at a summit meeting
in Libya in early February to stop supporting rebels on each other's
territory and to tone down the belligerent talk. But Chadian rebels
have remained on the Sudanese side of the border, and it is not
clear whether Mr. Déby has the capacity to stop members of
his clan from supporting Darfur rebels.
If unchecked by international intervention, this complex and volatile
mix of government forces, allied militias and at least a half-dozen
rebel groups in a remote region awash with weapons will almost inevitably
lead to disaster, said John Prendergast, a senior adviser at the
International Crisis Group, a nonpartisan nonprofit organization,
and an expert on the Darfur conflict."The principle strategy
of all these actors, both state actors and proxy militias, is to
displace people in order to destabilize and undermine the support
base of your opponent," he said. "We are going to see
an increasing spiral of displacement on both sides of the border
and an increasingly dangerous environment for humanitarian workers."
n Chad, the trouble began in December when rebel groups attacked
Adré and two other strategic border towns. The Chadian Army
repelled the rebels, but it withdrew its troops from garrisons along
the border to fortify Adré.
Darfur War SpreadsThe withdrawal has left a security vacuum into
which the janjaweed have rushed. The once well-traveled road between
Adré, a bustling border town, and Kolloye has become a terrifying
gantlet roamed by bandits and Arab militias. Dozens of villages
have emptied; some have been burned. The few aid agencies working
in this lawless region avoid the road, using a circuitous route
farther west to reach Abéché, the regional capital.In
six days of traveling along the frontier, a reporter and photographer
for The New York Times saw just four policemen to keep the peace,
equipped only with horses and armed with battered AK-47's. Outside
of Adré, only one military patrol was visible.
What appeared to be another military patrol just south of Adré,
four soldiers commanded by an aging officer with thick glasses and
rheumy eyes, was in fact a search party for the missing cattle of
the commanding officer, Adoum Allatchi Gaga. His cows had been stolen
by raiders across the border. Asked about the security situation
in the region, Mr. Gaga said: "I don't have any idea. I am
just looking for my cows."
At the hospital in Adré, the number of gunshot victims in
December and January almost doubled, to about 100 a month, relief
officials said, a grim sign of the growing lawlessness.
In one ward lay Fatime Youma, a 13-year-old girl with a tube draining
the gunshot wound that had punctured her lung.
She was shot, her father explained, by janjaweed who happened upon
her and her 16-year-old sister, Zenab, who lay in the next room
with a gunshot wound to her arm."I was just looking for firewood
with my sister," Zenab said softly. "When the raiders
saw us we ran away but they shot at us."Adré's police
chief, Mahamat Lony, said he was short of both officers and weapons."We
have a very catastrophic situation," he said. "We have
a very long frontier with Sudan, and many heavily armed raiders
on the other side. There have been many incursions, and they attack
the population. We have many displaced, and no one is helping them."
The man charged with defending Chad's border and protecting refugees
and civilians is Gen. Abakar Youssouf Mahamat Itno, 38, a nephew
of President Déby who was dispatched here the day of the
rebel attack."Sudan wants to export the war in Darfur to us
here," General Itno said at his camp in the hills above Adré.
"They want to use the janjaweed they armed to terrorize Darfur,
to terrorize our population. We will not allow it."Even so,
he acknowledged his inability to patrol the border areas. "It
is a long border," he said. "We cannot be everywhere at
once."
That Chadian rebels have found sanctuary in Sudan is beyond doubt.
Geneina, the capital of Western Darfur, resembles a garrison town;
armed men from at least six forces are visible on the streets, as
are Arabs in street clothes carrying AK-47's. Local residents identify
them as janjaweed.
In the market in the evening, Chadian Army deserters wearing their
distinctive turbans sit drinking tea, submachine guns beside them.
Freshly dug machine-gun pits surround the police and army stations,
and aid agencies are putting sandbags around their offices. The
Chadian rebels have new weapons, uniforms and vehicles, aid officials
in Geneina said, leading many to conclude that they are getting
support from the Sudanese government. With so much firepower on
the Sudanese side of the border, residents in villages like Adé,
south of Adré, have borne almost daily attacks."There
is no security here," said Hisseine Kassar Mostapha, secretary
general of the local government in Adé. "We are out
here completely on our own, with no one to protect us."
The lack of security means little assistance from international
aid groups. In Kolloye, 10,000 Chadians, refugees like Ms. Mahamat,
live in roofless grass shelters that give little protection from
the frigid night air and no shelter from the punishing desert sun.
Water is scarce and food supplies are low, villagers said. The only
assistance is a mobile clinic run by Doctors Without Borders that
operates three times a week.
One refugee, Kaltam Abdullah, cradled her year-old son in her lap;
his head lolled on his neck, his eyes were glazed and his limbs
slender.
"He has had running stomach for 10 days," Ms. Abdullah
said. "He is coughing. But there is no doctor."
Meanwhile, Sudanese refugees continue to arrive in Chad. Last month
there were 1,500 arrivals, up from 1,000 over the previous three
months, said Claire Bourgeois, the deputy representative for the
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Abéché.
She said all the camps were full except one, and that it was filling
up quickly.Several camps holding tens of thousands of refugees will
be moved further west, Ms. Bourgeois said, to protect the refugees
from the violence. But safety remains a serious problem, she added,
and "if there is no security, the humanitarian actors will
leave."Sudanese refugees who have arrived in recent weeks recount
grim tales of slaughter, rape and plunder.Ibrahim Suleiman Mahamat,
a herder from the Masalit tribe who lived along the border, said
janjaweed had stolen his livestock: 40 cows, 20 goats and sheep,
2 camels and 2 horses. Penniless and terrified, he had little choice
but to cross into Chad with his two wives and six children. Dozens
of relatives left behind plan to join him, he said. Even in the
relative safety of the Gaga Refugee Camp, far west of the border,
he said, he does not feel safe."We are in a very dangerous
situation," Mr. Mahamat said. "What happens if there is
a war in the country you are from and the country you have fled
to? We are nowhere. There is nowhere for us to go."
From: URL: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/28/international/africa/28border.html?pagewanted=1
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