Attacks on aid workers in Sudan must stop now

At least 19 humanitarian workers have died since the conflict started in mid-April. Targeting them is illegal and inhuman.

In my 30-year career as an aid worker, I have never faced an operating environment as challenging as the one in Sudan. What I have personally witnessed since the conflict erupted across the country on April 15 and the stories I hear – especially from the Darfur region – are harrowing.

No one should have to endure such horror or pain.

The very day fighting broke out across the country, tragedy struck the humanitarian community. Three World Food Programme (WFP) staff members – Osman Ali, Siddig Mohammed and Yousif Elzain – were killed in North Darfur.

These dedicated humanitarian workers had been in a remote area delivering emergency cash assistance to some of Sudan’s most vulnerable people.

They are among 19 humanitarian workers – all Sudanese – who have lost their lives in the past four months. The war has already claimed the lives of at least 1,100 civilians and left millions in urgent need of assistance.

Yet this vitally needed aid has also come under direct attack: At least 53 humanitarian warehouses have been looted and 87 offices ransacked. More than 40,000 tons of WFP food assistance has been stolen and a logistics hub in southcentral Sudan – one of largest on the African continent – was overrun.

Despite the very real risk to their lives, humanitarians on the ground in Sudan continu to overcome immense challenges to support those suffering the most in this conflict.

The outlook is grim. Hunger stands at record levels, and 6.3 million people are one step away from famine. Over 4.4 million people have been forced to flee their homes to seek safety in other parts of Sudan and neighbouring countries. Humanitarian needs are higher than ever before with half the population – or 24.7 million people – in need of assistance.

As the conflict has spread, its dynamics have become increasingly more complex. Insecurity means that gaining access to people in need of life-saving assistance is increasingly difficult, yet even more urgent than ever before as more people are struggling to meet their most basic needs.

No matter what, we will continue to stand shoulder to shoulder with the Sudanese people in their darkest hour. We will not stop delivering critical aid to those fighting for survival.

While our dedication as humanitarians helps keep us going in difficult circumstances, our conviction alone is not enough. We require all parties to the conflict to adhere to their obligations under international law.

The targeting of aid workers and humanitarian assistance is against the rules of war. Humanitarians and the aid they provide are neutral and impartial in conflict. They dedicate their lives to helping people caught up in crisis. Their safety – and that of the civilians they serve – must be guaranteed.

Since early May, aid organisations have so far supported over 3 million people with life-saving assistance such as food, water, nutrition, shelter and medical services. We want to and need to do more: This year humanitarian actors in Sudan are ramping up to assist 18.1 million people by the end of the year.

So, we are left to remind the parties to the conflict of their obligations under international humanitarian law, enshrined in the Declaration of Commitments signed in Jeddah on May 11. They agreed then to protect the civilians of Sudan and to protect humanitarian personnel and assets. They affirmed that it is prohibited to attack, harass, intimidate, or arbitrarily detain personnel, or to attack, destroy, misappropriate, or loot relief supplies, installations, material, units or vehicles.

On World Humanitarian Day on Saturday, we honour those who have fallen and the dedicated aid workers who continue to put their lives on the line every day to serve people in need. And it is for the very people we serve that we continue to urge all parties to the conflict in Sudan to remember and honour the commitments they made more than three months ago: To facilitate humanitarian action and protect those whose job it is to deliver it.

We, the humanitarian community, could be doing even more for the Sudanese people whose lives have been shattered by the ongoing violence if we could safely reach all locations where people need our help, if we were able to transport relief items without the threat of theft, and if we did not have to fear for our lives.

There is not a minute to lose – the Sudanese people need our assistance now more than ever.

 

 

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