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The Swiss-based NGO Medair is greatly concerned by reports concerning the looting of a primary health care clinic it supports in the village of Bir Dagaig in West Darfur, Sudan.
Although information is difficult to verify in this remote location, several eyewitnesses have reported that the clinic has been damaged, and its contents looted by armed militia.
Following a dispute between armed militia and the local community last week, village representatives report that the entire population fled the village, apparently in fear of an attack. Most of them sought refuge in nearby towns, although a number of individuals are still reported missing. After the population was gone, the village -- including the health clinic -- was looted.
Bir Dagaig is a village of around 6,500 people, situated some 30 kilometres north of the state capital, El Geneina. Its clinic, which treats around 60 patients per day, is operated by the local Ministry of Health and has been supported by Medair since 2001.
"This clinic is in a well-known and clearly marked location," said Ina Hogendoorn, Medair's Desk Officer for the northern states of Sudan. "It is completely unacceptable that it should be attacked in this way. The loss of essential medicines and supplies will have a significant impact on the provision of health care in the area.."
Medair also supports emergency water systems and hand pumps in the area, although it is not currently known if these facilities have been damaged.
"This incident highlights the insecurity encountered in Darfur," said John Farmer, Medair's Operations Director. "Although none of our international staff were in Bir Dagaig at the time, this kind of incident demonstrates the threats faced by our staff and by local communities."
One of the villagers who fled to safer refuge said, "We appreciate the services Medair has provided in Bir Dagaig, especially as they were the first humanitarian agency to work there, many years ago. However, we need to feel safe."
Medair is continuing to monitor the situation in collaboration with other agencies, and is seeking ways to provide assistance to the communities affected by this incident.
Medair is an international non-governmental organization (NGO), based in Switzerland. It has worked in Sudan since 1995, and in West Darfur since 2001, where Medair currently provides access to primary health care, and water & sanitation for up to 200,000 conflict-affected persons. These activities are carried out in collaboration with the Humanitarian Aid Commission, Ministry of Health, and other Government of Sudan agencies, and receive financial support from the governments of the United Kingdom (DfID,) the USA (OFDA), and from the United Nations' Sudan Common Humanitarian Fund (CHF).
Elsewhere in Sudan, Medair works with war-displaced people in Khartoum, and supports access to primary health care, and safe water and sanitation in the Nuba Mountains area of South Kordofan. In Southern Sudan, Medair provides emergency medical and water assistance, primarily in Upper Nile.
Medair's life-saving activities are dependent upon private financial support. To contribute to this work, please visit www.medair.org (Sudan section.)
[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]
A member of the African Union Mission in Sudan (AMIS) guards a ridge during an armoured personnel carrier (APC) weapons training some 20 km (12 miles) outside El Fasher, the administrative capital of north Darfur, November 8, 2007. Newly arrived troops from two extra battalions of Rwandan and Nigerian soldiers have recently arrived in Sudan's war-torn western region to boost the already 7,000 personnel on the ground ahead of a planned handover from AMIS to a joint African Union-United Nations Mission known as UNAMID consisting of 26,000 personnel at the end of 2007. The troops were undertaking weapons training as part of an APC training course before their deployment to mission groups sites across Darfur. REUTERS/Stuart Price/AMIS/Handout (SUDAN). EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NOT FOR SALE FOR MARKETING OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS.