The UN’s World Food Program said on Friday it had begun delivering much-needed aid to the Darfur region of for the first time in months.
Two convoys were able to enter Darfur via a border crossing with Chad. They carried enough food for 250,000 people.
Darfur, along with the Sudanese capital of Khartoum, face amid fighting between Sudan’s military and the paramilitary that has displaced more than eight million people and destroyed vital infrastructure.
Meanwhile, the WFP warned that the latest cereals harvest in Darfur was 78% below the five-year average.
“Hunger in Sudan will only increase as the lean season starts in just a few weeks. I fear that we will see unprecedented levels of starvation and malnutrition sweep across Sudan,” said the WFP’s top envoy to Sudan, Eddie Rowe.
Fighting and border closures block aid
Some areas of Sudan are at the household level, but the fighting and border closures have prevented humanitarian organizations from delivering aid.
“We are extremely concerned that unless the people of Sudan receive a constant flow of aid via all possible humanitarian corridors — from neighboring countries and across battle lines — the country’s hunger catastrophe will only worsen,” WFP’s Sudan spokesperson Leni Kinzli said.
In February, the Sudanese army closed the Adre border crossing for aid deliveries after accusing the RSF of receiving support from the United Arab Emirates via . The WFP said it does not know when it will be able to use this route again.
“The temporary halt of the humanitarian corridor from Chad as well as ongoing fighting, lengthy clearance processes for humanitarian cargo, bureaucratic impediments, and security threats have made it impossible for humanitarians to operate at the scale needed to meet the hunger needs in Sudan,” Kinzli added.
The UN appeal for $2.7 billion (€2.5 billion) for Sudan was less than 5% funded as of last month.
zc/ab (AFP, Reuters, AP)
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