Weekly Round-Up - IRINHA-235: 25-Mar-05
U N I T E D N A T I O N S
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
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HORN OF AFRICA
IRIN-HOA Weekly Round-Up 235
19 - 25 March 2005
CONTENTS:
SUDAN: Aid worker shot and injured in Darfur
SUDAN: IDPs forced to move as Khartoum settlement is demolished
SUDAN: Meningitis breaks out in North Darfur
SUDAN: Response to funding appeal insufficient, uneven
ERITREA: Reported meningitis outbreak under control - WHO
ETHIOPIA: Majority lack access to clean water - UNICEF
ETHIOPIA: EU to observe May general elections
SOMALIA: Interim government to relocate to Baidoa and Jowhar
SOMALIA: Sudanese and Ugandan peacekeepers to be deployed first - IGAD
ALSO SEE:
SOMALIA: Somaliland still blighted by plastic bags, despite ban
at: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46289&SelectRegion=Horn_of_Africa
ETHIOPIA: Fistula hospital continues services for young women
at: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=45984&SelectRegion=Horn_of_Africa
SUDAN: Aid worker shot and injured in Darfur
An American aid worker was shot in the face on Tuesday in South Darfur,
a state in western Sudan, when unidentified gunmen ambushed her convoy,
the US State Department said. The clearly marked humanitarian vehicle
was attacked between the towns of Nyala and Kass.
"I was deeply saddened to learn that a member of the United States
Agency for International Development's [USAID] Disaster Assistance
Response Team was shot and wounded in Darfur," Condoleezza Rice, US
secretary of state, said in a statement read by spokesman Adam Ereli.
"The thoughts and prayers of all of us at the Department of State and
USAID are with her and her family as she continues to receive
treatment."
Jan Pronk, the UN special envoy to Sudan condemned the attack. In a
statement, Pronk said such incidents were unlikely to stop unless a
robust protection force of at least 8,000 troops was deployed in Darfur
to protect both the civilian population and humanitarian workers. The
Sudanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressed deep regret over the
incident, and "strongly condemned the unjustifiable attack on the relief
convoys and workers of humanitarian aid in Darfur."
[Full story at:
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46269]
SUDAN: IDPs forced to move as Khartoum settlement is demolished
At least 11,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) were forced to move
following the demolition of the Shikan settlement, 18 km north of the
Sudanese capital, Khartoum, a UN spokesperson said on Tuesday. They were
now living rough in El Fateh, a desert area north of the capital, she
added.
"From 28 December, the Sudanese authorities began demolishing Shikan, an
area the size of 16 football fields, as part of a re-zoning policy in
Khartoum state," Kirsten Zaat, advocacy officer at the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Khartoum, told IRIN.
Abd El Wahab M. Osman, Minister of Physical Planning and Utilities of
Khartoum State was not available for comment but another government
official, who declined to be named, said the destruction was part of a
larger re-planning programme that was meant to provide plots for
residents and bring them vital services such as electricity and water.
More than 13,000 IDPs, displaced by the 21-year-old war that ended in
southern Sudan in January, had found shelter in Shikan, a squatter area
established in the 1980s. Nuba, Majanin, Arab, Shilluk, Dinka, Masalit,
Felata and Khofra were among the ethnic groups in Shikan. Around 15
percent of the resident IDP population of Shikan was permitted to stay.
The remaining 85 percent were moved to El Fateh, a desert area 38 km
north of Omdurman, a city just north of Khartoum.
[Full story at:
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46244]
SUDAN: Meningitis breaks out in North Darfur
A meningitis outbreak was reported in the North Darfur state of western
Sudan, after humanitarian agencies confirmed five cases in an internally
displaced persons (IDP) camp in the area, the UN reported on Sunday.
Five people in the Saraf Umra camp had been diagnosed with the disease
since 11 January, the UN Advance Mission to Sudan (UNAMIS) said.
Twenty-seven other suspected cases in North Darfur, including two
deaths, had been reported.
A meningitis vaccination plan for the camp had been developed, and about
160,000 doses of meningitis trivalent vaccine requested from WHO.
UNAMIS's situation report said that vaccines for UN and NGO staff were
available at the UN clinic in Khartoum, and the MERT (WHO medical
emergency response team) clinics in the three Darfur states.
WHO provided laboratory reagents and supplies for the confirmation of
the disease, together with drugs necessary for case management in all of
Sudan's states. In February, another outbreak of the disease was
reported in North Kordofan, central Sudan.
[Full story at:
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46239]
SUDAN: Response to funding appeal insufficient, uneven - UN
Donor support for humanitarian aid and recovery projects in Sudan has
remained insufficient and unbalanced, a UN spokesperson said on Monday.
The 2005 UN Work Plan for the Sudan, released in November 2004, had
appealed for US $1.5 billion to fund an emergency programme to support
humanitarian, protection, recovery and development activities in the
conflict-affected country in 2005.
Donors had so far contributed only $387 million, about a quarter of the
requested funds, according to a Work Plan Funding Overview of the UN
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) released on
13 March.
The lion's share of the donations to Sudan went towards food assistance,
while other sectors, including health, education, shelter and water,
received three percent or less. On average, Darfur received about 75
percent of the donated funds, while southern Sudan received slightly
more than 14 percent. National programmes, including mine action,
infrastructure and the rule of law, got an eight percent allocation,
while the rest of Sudan, including the east and the transitional areas,
got no more than one percent.
[Full story at:
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46210]
ERITREA: Reported meningitis outbreak under control - WHO
The onset of seasonal rains in Eritrea has helped to bring under control
an outbreak of meningitis that killed one child in the southern Debub
Zone, a WHO official told IRIN. Another 33 cases had been reported in
nine villages in the zone, the WHO country representative in Eritrea,
Andrew Kosia, said on Wednesday.
Between March and May, Eritrea's central highlands, where the Debub Zone
is located, along with other parts of the country, tend to receive
scattered rains (called the Azmera rains), followed by the main rainy
season (Kremti) between July and September.
Meningitis is an infection of the thin lining surrounding the brain and
the spinal cord and is transmitted through droplets in the air by
coughing and sneezing, for example. It can cause death, brain damage,
hearing loss or learning disability, and its most common symptoms are a
stiff neck, high fever, sensitivity to light, confusion, headaches and
vomiting.
[Full story at:
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46288]
ETHIOPIA: Majority lack access to clean water - UNICEF
Three-quarters of Ethiopia's 71 million people do not have access to
clean water, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) said on Tuesday. Four out
of five live without proper sanitation, it added.
Speaking on World Water Day, Bjorn Ljungqvist, UNICEF's representative
in Ethiopia, said the country faced enormous challenges if it was to
reach the 2015 Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). He said Ethiopia
must provide clean water for 3.6 million people, and toilets for 4.5
million, every year if it was to reach the targets.
Ethiopian athlete Berhane Adere, a UNICEF goodwill ambassador, said
hundreds of children were dying each day from diarrhoea and other
dirty-water-related illnesses. She told officials in Addis Ababa, where
World Water Day was being celebrated, that clean water could also help
get girls into school.
Ethiopian president Girma Woldegiorgis said that water management in the
country could boost food production and end hunger. "With the frequent
droughts and unreliability, the obvious way for Ethiopia to increase its
food production is to develop irrigation schemes," he said. "In areas
where water is scarce and rains are erratic, rainwater harvesting is
being widely implemented to supply farmers with this important
commodity."
[Full story at:
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46270]
ETHIOPIA: EU to observe May general elections
The European Union (EU) has fielded one of its largest ever teams of
election observers to Ethiopia for the 15 May general polls, the mission
chief, Ana Gomes, said. She told reporters on Monday in Addis Ababa,
that the forthcoming national elections could play a critical role in
fostering democracy in Ethiopia and greater stability in the Horn of
Africa.
The 159-strong observer mission, which would cost about =802.8 million (US
$3.68 million), had some initial concerns over whether the elections
would be free and fair, she added. Gomes said that access to the media
for the opposition groups, as well as potential partisanship of the
national election board, were issues they would address.
In April 50 additional observers will arrive, and in early May, 100 more
observers will be deployed for the polls, she added. Opposition groups,
however, criticised the mission, saying it had arrived too late and with
too few observers to effectively monitor the 38,000 polling stations.
[Full story at:
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46234]
SOMALIA: Interim government to relocate to Baidoa and Jowhar
The interim Somali government, based in Nairobi, Kenya, is to relocate
to the towns of Baidoa, 240 km southwest of the capital Mogadishu, and
Jowhar, 90 km north of the capital, an official told IRIN on Tuesday.
"The cabinet has decided that the government will temporarily relocate
to Jowhar and Baidoa," Abdirahman Nur Dinari, a government spokesman,
said. It would operate simultaneously from the two towns, he added.
The move, he added, was backed by 64 of the 74 ministers present during
a Council of Ministers meeting on Monday. However, other sources said
ten ministers, including key Mogadishu-based faction leaders, walked out
of the meeting in protest. These included Usman Hassan Ali "Atto", Muse
Sudi Yalahow, Umar Mahamud "Finish" and Muhammad Qanyare Afrah.
The leaders who walked out, between them, control most of the capital
city and wanted the government to move there directly. They had asked
for three months "to prepare and secure the city" for the government,
according to a Somali political source.
The spokesman said the government would open an office in Mogadishu "to
monitor the situation and once it is decided that the capital is ready,
the government will move there".
The new government, which includes several faction leaders, has so far
failed to move to Mogadishu, citing security considerations. However, it
has come under increasing pressure from the Kenyan government and
western diplomats to relocate from Nairobi.
[Full story at:
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46236]
SOMALIA: Sudanese and Ugandan peacekeepers to be deployed first - IGAD
Sudan and Uganda will be the first countries to send peacekeepers to
Somalia, while neighbouring states will initially only provide
logistical support, a top official at the Intergovernmental Authority on
Development (IGAD) told IRIN on Monday.
Ugandan foreign minister and chairman of the IGAD Council of Ministers,
Sam Kutesa, said the regional body had decided to send just Sudanese and
Ugandan troops "because of the suspicion among many Somalis that
frontline states, such as Ethiopia, Kenya and Djibouti, supported
different factions during the war, and therefore have their own
interests".
IGAD's Council of Ministers said on Friday that other member states
would, during the first phase of the deployment, be required to provide
equipment and emergency assistance, as well as to train the Somali army
and police force. Troops from the other states were, however, expected
to participate in the second phase of the peacekeeping mission, after
which an African Union force was planned for Somalia, the council said
in a communique.
The inclusion of troops from the neighbouring countries has divided
Somali politicians, with some supporting the deployment and others
saying that soldiers from Djibouti, Ethiopia and Kenya might be tempted
to meddle in Somalia's internal affairs.
IGAD - which comprises Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia,
Sudan and Uganda - sponsored the reconciliation process that culminated
in the formation of Somalia's transitional federal government in Nairobi
last year.
[Full story at:
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46203]
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