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Sudan/People and Projects

Darfur Photojournal
(20 August 2004)
Al-Riyadh Camp
Adeel Jafferi, Islamic Relief Press Officer, flew out to join IR's aid workers in Darfur last week, and is writing a diary for Islamic-Relief.com about his experiences.

Al-Riyadh Camp

Saturday 7th August: I arrived in the Al Riyadh camp in El-Geneina, West Darfur's main town, which Islamic Relief have been managing since the crisis began. My first view was from the rise of a hill and the scene was overwhelming. The staff in Khartoum had given me an idea of what to expect, but nothing could have prepared me for what I saw. Stretched out for miles were tiny makeshift shelters made of twigs.

Hawaji Hawaji!

children in al-Riyadh camp

As I wander in I am immediately immersed in camp life. Children run screaming toward me and start shouting "Hawaji, Hawaji". I am told by my interpreter, Abdullah, that this means white man. It's the first time I've been called that and it seems a little strange considering I am dark skinned. Still, it becomes the shout I hear everywhere I go and I begin to like it so much that when anyone asks my name I say it's Hawaji. The children howl with laughter.


Isra

4.30 pm: I meet a young girl on a donkey with jerry cans of water which she has collected from the nearby pump. Her name is Isra and she is 7 years old - an Internally Displaced Person - forced from her home with her family when the fighting came too close for comfort. She asks me to visit her grandfather who is suffering from malnutrition. When I walk in a frail old man is lying on a bed. He sees me and tries to rise. The effort is too much and he lies back with a resigned sigh.

Heavy Rain

Rain storm

6.00 pm: Rain begins to fall, but It's like nothing I have ever seen before. Sand starts to fly and it hits my face like small fragments of glass. People are running everywhere trying to find shelter. Within minutes the bustling camp is deserted. People huddle under sack cloth and blankets.


The Burial of Abu Adai

Sunday 8th August: I decide that I should go and visit Isra and her grandfather before I get too busy with the day's routine. As I walk I see a large group of men standing in the distance. Apparently there's a funeral for somebody who died last night of malnutrition. I get a sinking feeling. As I wander over I meet Isra's uncle. As I feared, the funeral is for Abu Adai, Isra's grandfather. I watch them dig his grave and bury a man that I had been talking to only a day ago


No Security


mother and child

11.00 am: A group of women gather to speak to me of what they have suffered. Their stories are chillingly similar. Their husbands and, in some cases, their young sons have been killed in their homes or in mosques. They are all desperate for food and protection. Their cries, they say, have gone unheard. Each one says that they are still scared that the horror is not over, even in the relative safety of an IDP camp.

Aid

4.00 pm: Islamic Relief staff begin preparing for tomorrow's aid distribution. Everything is planned to the last detail to avoid the chaos that is usual in large distributions. A potential donor is coming to see us tomorrow and we have to get this right. Donations for Sudan have been pitifully small. Without money, none of the aid agencies working here can operate. Without more money, people will die. The equation is that simple. The situation is that bleak.

Elders

Islamic Relief staff together with tribal elders have planned an orderly distribution with people arriving in groups of 30 to recieve aid items. The distribution begins and suddenly the elders take control of the situation. Immediately everybody falls silent and forms orderly lines of 15 men and 15 women. It's a sight to behold. I have seen drill sergeants with less control over their troops.

Al-Geneina Hospital

Arriving at Al-Geneina hospital I am ushered into meet Dr Abdul Latif Abdul Aziz, the Chief of Surgery who doubles as the hospital administrator. He leads me down a corridor where a frail man lies on a bed. He has been shot in the kidney and is hooked up to a colostomy bag. He also suffers from severe malnutrition.


Traumatised Children

Abdul Aziz

It often happens that the needs of children are neglected in favour of the wider human catastrophe. This is never deliberate, but sadly the trauma that these children have faced is not always the main priority. These children will relive the horror they have endured until the day they die. It's a stark fact, but one which the world needs to ponder. The cycle of violence and deprivation could end now with these children, if we only had the resources.

People of Darfur

Adeel and Children

Isra's sister and uncle approach me and tell me that they have said special prayers that I return to Darfur in happier times. If I return to Darfur, they say, I must stay with them as their guest.

I see that this is not a hollow invitation. What little they have, they are willing to share. It will be nice to get back to Khartoum, the reality is, though, that I prefer to be here, despite all the hardships. The people here have taught me the real meaning of courage, strength, generosity and kindness. I know I will come back.







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