Women, Children Flee Darfur After Attacks
By Holly Desimone, published Jun 01, 2007
Published Content: 20 Total Views: 3,869 Favorited By: 0 CPs
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) -- Hundreds of women and children fled by foot and on donkeys from Darfur to the neighboring Central African Republic after their town was attacked by planes and helicopters, the U.N. refugee agency said Friday.
The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees was rushing aid to the 1,500 refugees who made the grueling 125-mile journey over 10 days, said spokeswoman Jennifer Pagonis.
The refugees told U.N. officials their town of Dafak, in southern Darfur, was attacked repeatedly by janjaweed militia from May 12 to May 18 and that their homes had been bombarded by airstrikes, Pagonis said.
"There were more air attacks even as they were fleeing," the refugees told UNHCR monitors, according to Pagonis. "Refugees said they will not return to Darfur before basic safety ... can be guaranteed. Many of them expressed fear of further attacks."
The U.N. and African Union peacekeepers regularly report the Sudanese air force bombs Darfur villagers and rebel positions, despite a U.N. resolution forbidding such attacks. Aid and humanitarian workers, as well as Darfur survivors, have said the air attacks are often in preparation for raids by pro-government janjaweed militiamen that follow shortly after the bombings.
A Sudanese military official contacted by The Associated Press in Khartoum declined comment on the attacks reported in Dafak.
More than 200,000 people in Darfur have been killed and 2.5 million chased from their homes since fighting broke out in 2003 between ethnic African rebels and the janjaweed militia. A beleaguered, 7,000-member African Union force has been unable to stop the fighting and neither has a peace agreement signed a year ago year between the government and one rebel group.
CNN has more about this story http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/africa/06/01/darfur.refugees.ap/index.html
Women, Children Flee Darfur After Attacks
A Sudanese woman holds her baby in a classroom in the Goz Amir refugee camp this past April in Goz Amir, Chad.
Credit: Getty Images
Copyright: Getty Images
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Takeaways
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