Marc Schlueter


Free Account, Hamburg

Flut in der Wüste...

(dieses Bild wurde 4 Tage nach der Flut vom 31.10.1994 im Flüchtlingslager El Aaiun aufgenommen)

West Sahara
carpeta West Sahara
(18)


Aktuelle Infos von und über die West Sahara (in englisch): http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Sahara-Update

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WESTERN SAHARA: Tens of thousands of refugees homeless after rains wipe
out shelters


Integrated Regional Information Networks (IRIN)
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
DAKAR
16 February 2006

Aid agencies are rushing to help some 60,000 Western Sahara refugees after
freak rains late last week wiped out houses and schools and damaged
hospitals in camps in eastern Algeria.

Because the rains - reportedly the worst seen in the area since 1994 -
came on the heels of the UN World Food Programme’s February distribution,
refugees have lost an entire month’s food supply, a WFP official told IRIN
on Wednesday.

“Heavy, concentrated rains [at the end of last week] basically melted
houses, administration buildings, the Red Cross building and schools,”
said Michelle Iseminger, head of WFP’s office in Tindouf, Algeria. Aid
workers say flooding also severely damaged hospitals and markets.

“[Refugees] had just received their monthly distribution,” she said.

It is estimated that more than 150,000 Sahrawis - people from the disputed
territory of Western Sahara - have lived in five refugee settlements near
Tindouf since 1975; it is not clear exactly how many are currently in the
camps. UN humanitarian agencies are assisting some 90,000 of the most
vulnerable refugees.

The UN refugee agency UNHCR said the rains destroyed up to 50 percent of
the mud brick houses in Awserd, Laayoune and Smara camps, leaving another
25 percent of shelters “seriously damaged and on the verge of collapse.” A
fourth settlement was also severely damaged.

Using its own emergency funds, WFP will begin a one-month distribution to
replace the food destroyed by the rains. But the agency says the refugees’
new plight will put a burden on already strained food aid resources for
the Sahrawi refugees.

“This makes WFP’s needs tremendously more urgent,” Iseminger said.

In a statement on Thursday, WFP said it needs about US $3.6 million to
cover food needs for the refugees over the next six months. “WFP intends
to continue helping the refugees but it can only do so with the help of
the international community,” WFP regional director Amir Abdulla said
after a visit to the camps. “That help is needed more than ever.”

He added, “These people are already facing hardship. Now many are homeless
and in urgent need of emergency assistance.”

WFP says 35 percent of children under five in the camps suffer chronic
malnutrition.

UNHCR is preparing an airlift of tents, blankets, jerry cans, mattresses
and plastic sheeting from the agency’s regional warehouse in Jordan, a
UNHCR statement said. A UNHCR official at headquarters in Geneva said the
airlift is expected “in the coming days.” The agency will also send an
emergency team - including a water and sanitation specialist and a site
planner - to the area to work with UN officials already on the ground.

The Algerian government has provided tents and other supplies in recent
days, humanitarian officials said.

Western Sahara - a 266,000-kilometre area of desert lying between
Mauritania and Morocco - has been at the centre of a sovereignty dispute
since Spain let go its colonial grip in 1975.

The following years saw sporadic fighting between Morocco and the
Polisario Front - the group seeking independence for Western Sahara -
until the parties signed a ceasefire in 1991.

[ENDS]
---
Source:
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=51750&SelectRegion=West_Africa&SelectCountry=WESTERN_SAHARA

Comentarios 3

  • TobiasG 28/07/2007 18:10

    RESPEKT!
  • Marc Schlueter 20/02/2006 14:25

    Merci.
  • Thomas Heuer 19/02/2006 18:33

    vorallem in Verbindung mit Deinem Text streube ich mich davor zu schreiben: ein gutes Bild... (Auch wenn es so ist!)
    Die Situation der Flüchtlinge dort, ist wohl alles andere als angenehm. Es ist aber eine eindrucksvolle Dokumentation und macht die Hilflosigkeit der Frau sehr schön deutlich: verloren und verlassen in der Weite der Wüste...
    LieGrü Thomas