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UN seeks urgent access to Darfur bombing victims
06 May 2008 19:15:18 GMT
Source: Reuters
(Adds worst wounded moved out by car)

By Opheera McDoom

KHARTOUM, May 6 (Reuters) - The top U.N. humanitarian official in Sudan on Tuesday called for immediate access to those wounded in a government bombing attack on a school and busy marketplace in North Darfur, which killed 12 people.

Around 30 wounded, mostly women and children, have been waiting for help since the bomb attack on Sunday. No help has arrived because of logistical difficulties and denial of access by authorities, according to witnesses and aid sources.

The attack killed 12, including six children, a teacher at the school told Reuters by telephone. Earlier reports had a figure of 13 killed.

"I am deeply perturbed by the reported bombings of a school, water installations and a market where civilians, especially women and children are present," Sudan's U.N. Humanitarian Coordinator Ameerah Haq said in a statement.

"It is essential that we have immediate humanitarian access to the affected populations in order to provide humanitarian assistance and medical evacuation."

Haq is in Norway where donor nations are meeting Sudanese officials to pledge money to rebuild Sudan after decades of multiple civil wars.

If the death toll from the attack is confirmed, it would be the single deadliest bombing raid in many years in Darfur.

Mokhtar Mohamed, a teacher at the school in Shegeg Karo, said they had been told many times that U.N. planes were coming to evacuate the wounded but no help had arrived late on Tuesday.

"They said the government had stopped any planes coming to Shegeg Karo this morning," he said.

EVACUATE WOUNDED

One aid source in Darfur also told Reuters the government had not allowed planes to fly in on Tuesday. Sudan's army did not answer calls seeking comment.

The U.N.-African Union peacekeeping force said the government gave clearance to evacuate the wounded on Tuesday morning but did not elaborate why no flight went in.

Another teacher at the school, al-Fadil Mohamed, told Reuters they had sent seven injured to Chad by car and four others to a nearby town where they should meet the Red Cross the following day.

"The Red Cross said they would come to meet us there," he said.

The U.N. children's agency (UNICEF) urged the parties to the conflict to take all necessary measures to protect children.

"Children are to be afforded special protection during military operations and ...every effort must be made to ensure that schools, health centers...are considered as zones of peace, UNICEF said in a statement on the bombing raids.

Medical care, even in the state capitals of Darfur, is basic and it is practically non-existent in remote rural areas like Shegeg Karo.

International experts estimate some 200,000 have died and 2.5 million driven from their homes in five years of revolt in Darfur. Washington calls the violence genocide, a term Khartoum rejects and European governments are reluctant to use.

Sudan blames the Western media for exaggerating the conflict and puts the death toll at about 10,000. (Editing by Robert Woodward)
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