Women, children flee Darfur after attacks
June 1, 2007 - (AP) Hundreds of women and children
fled by foot and on donkeys from Darfur to the neighboring Central
African Republic after their town was attacked by planes and helicopters,
the U.N. refugee agency said Friday.
The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees was rushing
aid to the 1,500 refugees who made the grueling 125-mile journey
over 10 days, said spokeswoman Jennifer Pagonis.
The refugees told U.N. officials their town of
Dafak, in southern Darfur, was attacked repeatedly by janjaweed
militia from May 12 to May 18 and that their homes had been bombarded
by airstrikes, Pagonis said.
"There were more air attacks even as they
were fleeing," the refugees told UNHCR monitors, according
to Pagonis. "Refugees said they will not return to Darfur
before basic safety ... can be guaranteed. Many of them expressed
fear of further attacks."
The U.N. and African Union peacekeepers regularly
report the Sudanese air force bombs Darfur villagers and rebel
positions, despite a U.N. resolution forbidding such attacks.
Aid and humanitarian workers, as well as Darfur survivors, have
said the air attacks are often in preparation for raids by pro-government
janjaweed militiamen that follow shortly after the bombings.
A Sudanese military official contacted by The
Associated Press in Khartoum declined comment on the attacks reported
in Dafak.
More than 200,000 people in Darfur have been
killed and 2.5 million chased from their homes since fighting
broke out in 2003 between ethnic African rebels and the janjaweed
militia. A beleaguered, 7,000-member African Union force has been
unable to stop the fighting and neither has a peace agreement
signed a year ago year between the government and one rebel group.
Pagonis said the U.N. refugee agency was sending
in 600 rolls of plastic sheeting -- enough to provide temporary
shelter for 3,000 people -- while other U.N. agencies arrange
for food, water and sanitation supplies.
"More refugees are arriving daily"
in Central African Republic, Pagonis said. The impoverished country
hosts 10,000 refugees in total, mostly from Sudan, Congo and Chad.
There are also more than 200,000 citizens of the country uprooted
within its borders.
Pagonis said there were concerns about the city
of Sam-Ouandjia where the refugees have fled. The city, in the
northeastern corner of the country, has been attacked twice by
rebels in the last four months. The rebels are believed to have
crossed from bases in Darfur, whose conflict has increased instability
across the region where Sudan, Central African Republic and Chad
meet.
Pagonis rejected reports that rebels were entering
the Central African Republic mixed with the newly arrived women
and children from Darfur. "The assessment team found no evidence
of armed elements among the refugees," she told reporters
in Geneva, where UNHCR has its headquarters.
Pope Benedict XVI, meanwhile, met with Sudan's
new ambassador to the Vatican, Ahmed Hamid Elfaki Hamid, on Friday
and appealed for stepped-up efforts to end the "murderous
conflict" in Darfur.
In the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, some 60 demonstrators
gathered in front of the U.S. Embassy after Friday prayers to
protest new economic sanctions announced by President Bush to
pressure Sudan's government to halt the bloodshed in Darfur. The
protest lasted about an hour and there were no incidents, police
said.
From:http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/africa/06/01/darfur.refugees.ap/