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Sudan Tribune

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Lack of funds could mean cuts in South Sudan assistance – UN

Sept 15, 2006 (GENEVA) — The U.N. refugee agency said Friday that unless it receives more money soon, it will have to cut back “drastically” on operations to return tens of thousands of people who fled southern Sudan’s 21-year civil war.

A_4_year-old_Sudanese_boy_.jpgAntonio Guterres, the U.N. high commissioner for refugees, said there wasn’t enough money to support the agency’s goal of helping some of the 350,000 south Sudanese who were forced flee to neighboring countries before the conflict ended earlier this year.

The funding shortfall, according to the agency, “could mean suspending, postponing, reducing or canceling some south Sudan programs” by the end of September. It is seeking about $5.2 million each month to help returning refugees and some 4 million south Sudanese uprooted from their homes but still within the country.

“It is crucial that this effort continue for the people of Southern Sudan who have made the brave choice to return home and rebuild their lives,” Guterres said.

The UNHCR statement comes a day after U.N. Secretary-general Kofi Annan said in a report that many of the most important promises made under a peace deal ending warfare in the south hadn’t been met, threatening to plunge the long-suffering region back into violence.

The dire assessment said the Khartoum-based government and the southern Sudan People’s Liberation Army, which signed the deal with great fanfare in January 2005, have fallen well behind on plans for elections and are not sharing power and wealth as called for.

Annan’s report also said international donors have only provided about 56% of the $896.5 million called for to rebuild south Sudan. Pledges for more are also well below the amount needed, Annan said.

The south Sudan conflict was separate from the country’s ongoing humanitarian crisis in the western region of Darfur, where over 200,000 people have been killed and over 2 million have fled their homes since ethnic African tribes revolted against the Arab-led Khartoum government in 2003.

UNHCR said it has helped 12,000 refugees return to south Sudan this year, but said thousands more are expected to arrive from neighboring countries as the rainy season begins. It also has helped 12,000 ethnic Dinka tribespeople who had been displaced within Sudan to return home with their 1.5 million head of cattle.

Another 100,000 refugees have returned to south Sudan without UNHCR’s assistance, it added.

“The two decades of conflict left the south in ruins, and those who have made the choice to return home have faced real hardship,” the refugee body said. “But unless additional contributions are received soon, UNHCR will have to take measures to avoid overspending. In addition to severe curbs on its programs, the agency fears it may also have to close several offices and reduce staff in the region.”

(AP/ST)

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