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UN aid agencies strongly protest the expulsion of 13 leading non-governmental organizations from Sudan's conflict-ridden province of Darfur. The agencies warn of catastrophic consequences if the government of Omar al-Bashir does not rescind2 this decision.
Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir waves his cane3 in front of thousands of supporters at the entrance of the presidential palace in Khartoum, 05 Mar1 2009
The United Nations calls the expulsion of 13 leading international non-governmental organizations from Darfur catastrophic. It says it will be impossible to administer humanitarian4 aid to millions of civilians5 in this strife-torn region without their assistance.
It says this action by the Sudanese government is totally unacceptable. The government of Omar al-Bashir told the private aid agencies to leave the country after the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for the Sudanese president.
He is charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity committed during the six-year Darfur conflict.
The UN High Commissioner6 for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, joins the UN secretary-general in condemning7 the expulsions. She says this could prove disastrous8 given the life-saving work performed by private aid agencies, such as Oxfam, Save the Children and Care International.
Her spokesman, Rupert Colville, says the U.N. Human Rights Office will examine whether Sudan's decision to expel aid groups violates basic human rights and could constitute a war crime.
"To knowingly and deliberately9 deprive such a huge group of civilians of the means to survive is a deplorable act," he said. "Humanitarian assistance has nothing to do with the ICC [International Criminal Court] proceedings10. To punish civilians because of the decision of the ICC is a grievous dereliction of the government's duty to protect its own people."
Displaced Darfurians arrive in the Zamzam refugee camp in northern Darfur, Sudan, 26 Feb 2009
Aid operations in Darfur are the largest humanitarian emergency in the world. The United Nations reports up to 4.7 million people, including 2.7 million internally displaced persons are in need of assistance.
The U.N. says private aid agencies are vital to its humanitarian operations. It says they distribute much of the relief to the needy11. It warns the loss of these non-governmental organizations means that more than one million people will be without food, 1.5 million without health care, and over one million without drinkable water.
A spokeswoman for the World Health Organization, Fadela Chaib, says the expulsion of the aid agencies could lead to increased mortality and morbidity12 due to the interruption of health services.
"And, also can include declining immunization coverage13 and increasing mortality among children if they do not have access to therapeutic14 feeding and nutrition services," she said. "And, also what is very important for WHO, these NGO's were helping15 us also do surveillance of infectious diseases."
Chaib warns of possible outbreaks of infectious diseases, such as diarrhea and respiratory infections, if the NGO's no longer are available to monitor the emergence16 of disease.
The United Nations reports the expulsion order came as aid agencies were battling an outbreak of meningitis in Kalma Camp in southern Darfur, home to 90,000 people.
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