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UNHCR
chief to highlight security problems in Darfur
[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United
Nations]
NAIROBI, 22 Aug 2005 (IRIN) - The UN
High Commissioner for Refugees, Antonio Guterres, was due to arrive
in Sudan's capital, Khartoum, on Monday to urge the Sudanese
government to ensure security for displaced people living in the
strife-torn western Sudanese region of Darfur.
Guterres will be on a 10-day visit to Sudan, Chad and Kenya, a
spokesperson said.
Following meetings with Sudanese President Umar al-Bashir and other
government officials, Guterres will on Wednesday visit Darfur, where
fighting has displaced 1.9 million civilians.
"In Darfur, he will be underlining the need for the government of
Sudan to provide additional security to its own citizens," Kitty
McKinsey, regional spokesperson for UNHCR, told IRIN on Monday.
"Security needs to be provided for the displaced people in the camps
as well as in the villages where they would like to return to," she
added. "It is the responsibility of the Sudanese government."
McKinsey said the visit was also intended to lay emphasis on the
importance of the stalled Darfur peace talks in the Nigerian
capital, Abuja.
"More broadly, he is trying to refocus some of the international
attention on the continuing needs of the people of Darfur," she
said.
"Last year, Darfur was called the worst humanitarian crisis in the
world, but this year the region has disappeared from the
international radar screen, while people continue to suffer,"
McKinsey stressed. "Things have not gotten any better."
The war in Darfur began in February 2003 and pits Sudanese
government troops and militias allegedly allied to the government,
against rebels fighting to end what they describe as the
marginalisation of and discrimination against the region's
inhabitants by the state.
Following his visit to Darfur, Guterres is scheduled to visit
Iridimi and Iriba in eastern Chad, where 200,000 people who fled the
fighting in Darfur have found shelter in 12 camps.
"He wants to find out for himself, from the displaced, what their
concerns are," McKinsey said.
The UNHCR chief is due to meet Chadian President Idriss Deby on
Friday, and thereafter visit southern Sudan where he will inspect
preparations for the return of refugees, including the rebuilding of
schools and hospitals and the demining of roads.
McKinsey noted that UNHCR was anticipating a substantial influx of
returning refugees following the signing of a peace agreement for
the separate north-south conflict in January.
UNHCR estimates that more than four million people remain displaced
by conflict in southern Sudan.
Guterres is expected to conclude his trip to the region with a visit
to Kakuma refugee camp in northwestern Kenya on 30 August.
[ENDS]
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