Document Actions

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Urgent Humanitarian Aid May be Delayed by New Violence in Eastern Chad: Oxfam

Nov 14, 2006
For more information, contact:

Thousands of families are fleeing their homes due to mounting violence in eastern Chad, requiring immediate humanitarian assistance that may be compromised by deteriorating security, warned international agency Oxfam International today.
><p>

More than 10 villages in the southeastern border area next to Sudan's troubled western Darfur region have come under attack in the last several days, forcing the hurried evacuation of men, women and children.

Frightened families told of well-armed men on horseback storming their villages, stealing their possessions and scorching their crops. There were dozens of injuries, and dozens of deaths, most of them from gunshot wounds.

"Things are very, very desperate and are only likely to get worse. People are suffering; they are drinking dirty water and have nothing to eat," said Roland Van Hauwermeiren, the leader of Oxfam's humanitarian operations in eastern Chad, after a visit Thursday to some of the burned villages and conversations with new arrivals to the overflowing convergence sites in the southeast town of Koukou.

"We are mostly seeing women and children, who tell us that there are still people hiding in the bush, waiting until they can come," he said.

>The string of attacks is the latest incident marking the rapid decline of security in eastern Chad, due both to the deteriorating situation in Darfur and homegrown struggles for power.

Clusters of displaced people have converged on the only safe places in the region -- the refugee camps where humanitarian agencies provide food, water and medicine to more than 218,000 Sudanese refugees, as well as water to the surrounding communities. <

p>

As their numbers increase so does the pressure on limited supplies of water, food and medicines.

'Where last month Habile was home to 800 newly arrived families, there were nearly 4,000 more on Friday morning,'' said Van Hauwermeiren, who watched a woman give birth, unattended, on a patch of dirt during his visit to Habile on Thursday.

"Families are living without water, without sanitation and in desperate need of health care," said Van Hauwermeiren.

As part of an interagency emergency operation, Oxfam has begun setting up mobile water pumps. Emergency tapstands, pumps and pipes will be erected in coming days and plans are in place for installing an emergency tank that can store 95 cubic meters of water: two days' supply for 5,000 people.

Humanitarian workers travelling on the road from Goz Beida report that hundreds of people are travelling there on foot, carrying only the bare essentials they were able to salvage from their burned and looted villages.

"A lot of people are on the move, and they are not sure where they are going to go," said Van Hauwermeiren. "What they are sure of is that they will not be going home because it is just not safe."

Oxfam is calling on the Chadian authorities to move quickly and stabilise a situation that threatens to veer dangerously out of control and provoke further suffering within the civilian population.

"It is critical that humanitarian workers are able to reach the displaced populations in the areas near Goz Amir refugee camp in eastern Chad," said Van Hauwermeiren.

"Our biggest challenge right now is security, and it's only going to get worse, from what we are hearing from the populations. If we start moving stocks and equipment to the field and we are compromised by insecurity, and stuck in the middle of the road, we won't be able to help anybody."

Document Actions
Press contacts

To arrange an interview with an Oxfam spokesperson or for any other media enquiries, contact our press officers.

Matt Herrick
Director, Media & Public Relations
Boston, MA
Office: (617) 728-2408
Cell: (617) 821-7653 
Email: mherrick@oxfamamerica.org

Helen DaSilva
Corporate Relations and Branding Media Manager
Boston, MA
Office: (617) 728-2409
Cell: (617) 331-2984
Skype: mariahelenari
Email: hdasilva@oxfamamerica.org

Josh Silva
Press Officer, PR & Branding
Boston, MA
Office: (617) 517-9444
Cell: (617) 785-7772
Skype: jsilva982
Email: jsilva@oxfamamerica.org

Laura Rusu
Policy and Campaigns Media Manager
Washington, DC
Office: (202) 496-1169
Cell: (202) 459-3739
Email: lrusu@oxfamamerica.org

Andrew Blejwas
Humanitarian Media Manager
Boston, MA
Office: (617) 728-2544
Cell: (617) 785-7047
Skype: Andrew.Blejwas.oa
Email: ablejwas@oxfamamerica.org

Maura Hart
Senior Humanitarian Press Officer
New York, NY
Cell: (202) 476-0093
Skype: Maura_Hart
Email: mhart@oxfamamerica.org

Ben Grossman-Cohen
Economic Justice Press Officer
Washington, DC
Office: (202) 777-2907
Cell: (202) 629-6018
Skype: ben.grossmancohen
Email: bgrossman-cohen@oxfamamerica.org

Jessica Forres
Extractive Industries & Humanitarian Press Officer
Washington, DC
Office: (202) 777-2914
Cell: (202) 460-8272
Email: jforres@oxfamamerica.org

Lyndsay Cruz
Senior Advisor, Public Figures
Los Angeles, CA
Cell: (562) 331-0698
Skype: lyndsaycruz
Email: lcruz@oxfamamerica.org

Mary Babic
Communications Officer
Boston, MA
Office: (617) 517-9475
Cell: (617) 840-8957
Skype: marybabic.oa
Email: mbabic@oxfamamerica.org