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Sudan: Number of People Dying From Hunger Rapidly Growing in Sudan’s Nuba Mountains

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Kauda — The areas under control of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North under the leadership of Abdelaziz El Hilu (SPLM-N EL Hilu) in southern Sudan are witnessing widespread hunger, while the population in these areas has more than doubled since war broke out in the country more than 16 months ago. ‘The situation is alarming,’ civil society activist Ghandi Khalil told Radio Dabanga.

The SPLM-N El Hilu last month announced famine in the areas under its control in in the Nuba Mountains in South Kordofan and the New Funj area in Blue Nile state. About 20 per cent of the households in these areas suffers from food shortages and about 30 per cent of the children is malnourished.

According to SPLM-N estimates, the population of these areas increased from 1.2 million to about 3.9 million people as many sought refuge in these areas following the outbreak of the SAF-RSF war in April last year.

Last week, the rebel movement launched a broad campaign to draw the attention of local and international organisations to the dire humanitarian situation in the areas.

Ghandi Khalil of the Kamal Organisation for Development Initiatives described the living conditions in the SPLM-N areas as “critical” and attributed this to “the increasing number of displaced people affected by the war in the north”.

He told Radio Dabanga yesterday that the various organisations and institutions operating in the region since the renewed outbreak of the war between the SAF and the SPLM-N in June 2011, were providing services to about 1.2 million people. “The same health, education, water, and service provisions that barely covered the basic needs of 1.2 million people now have to be divided among three million people.

“The shortages of basic needs such as food, clean drinking water and shelter are causing problems between the people. Even agricultural and residential lands have now become the subject of dispute between the displaced and the residents”.

He further explained that “the war disrupted the cultivation of crops, while the people of the region depend on agriculture. The RSF are deployed in large areas near the Nuba Mountains and are keeping the main roads closed, causing serious shortages of fuel and seeds. They are wreaking havoc in the region, forcing farmers to stop cultivating their land.”

The lack of sufficient rainfall also contributed to the lack of food in sufficient quantities “even for the few who succeeded in cultivating their lands,” Khalil added.