UN refugee agency head says short of cash for Sudan
GENEVA, April 25 (Reuters) – Acting United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Wendy Chamberlin said on Monday the international donor community was providing far less cash than her agency needs in Sudan.
UNHCR’s Acting High Commissioner, Wendy Chamberlin. |
Chamberlin, just back from a visit to Sudan and to camps for Sudanese refugees that the UNHCR runs in Chad, told a news conference that more money was vital for the agency to maintain its operations both in and around Darfur and in southern Sudan.
“In Darfur, where we are acting … with the full authority of the United Nations and the Security Council, we have a $30 million programme but have received only $2 million,” said Chamberlin, a U.S. citizen.
The U.N. estimates that at least 180,000 people have died of hunger and disease in Darfur, and an unknown number have been killed in violence which intensified after rebels took up arms some two years ago and the government armed militia groups.
The agency also needs more money in Chad, where it runs camps for some 250,000 refugees who have fled the fighting in Darfur. Of $81 million required for Chad, only $30 million has been received, she added.
In southern Sudan, where the U.N. is sponsoring a recovery programme after two decades of civil war in which two million died and four million fled their homes, UNHCR appeals for its $61 million programme have so far brought in only $9 million.
But UNHCR officials said later that since a 60-nation conference in Oslo this month on the overall programme for the south, they had been assured a total of $20 million was in the pipeline for the refugee agency.