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Environment Woes Key Source Of Sudan Conflicts

The Darfur region of Sudan.
by Lucie Peytermann
Nairobi (AFP) June 22, 2007
Lasting peace in Sudan will not be possible unless the fractious country takes serious steps to address alarming environmental woes, said a UN report published Friday. Decades of war have devastated Africa's largest country and fresh competition for its resources continue to fuel conflict, said the report by the United Nations Environment Programme said.

"Long-term peace in the region will not be possible unless these underlying and closely linked environmental and livelihood issues are resolved," it said.

In its report, entitled "Sudan post-conflict environmental assessment", the UN agency stressed that desertification and land degradation had been a key source of conflict in impoverished Darfur.

"Northern Darfur -- where exponential population growth and related environmental stress have created the conditions for conflicts to be triggered and sustained by political, tribal or ethnic differences -- can be considered a tragic example of the social breakdown that can result from ecological collapse," the UN said.

The conflict in Sudan's parched western region of Darfur erupted in February 2003 when rebel groups complaining of marginalisation and demanding a greater share of the country's resources took up arms.

According to the UN, the Darfur conflict has left some 200,000 people dead. A bitter two-decade long north-south civil war ended in January 2005, after killing an estimated 1.5 million people.

The report identified a string of critical issues, such as population displacement, desertification, land degradation, deforestation, water projects, chaotic urbanisation and pollution from the country's booming oil industry.

Sudan is home to the world's largest population of displaced people, with more than one million who fled conflict in Darfur and almost every other part of the country in recent years.

"The scale of displacement and the particular vulnerability of the dry northern Sudanese environment may make this the most significant case of its type worldwide," the report said.

The report also said an estimated 50 to 200-kilometre (30 to 120 miles) southward drift of the boundary between semi-desert and desert as well as a sharp decline in precipitation due to climate change is fueling the rivalry between pastoralist and farming communities.

"Investment in environmental management, financed by the international community and from the country's emerging boom in oil and gas exports, will be a vital part of the peace building effort," the report says, according to UNEP.

UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP executive director Achim Steiner warned in the statement that the linkage between the environmental crisis and lasting instability in Sudan may be a harbinger of problems to come in other countries.

"Sudan's tragedy is not just the tragedy of one country in Africa -- it is a window to a wider world underlining how issues such as uncontrolled depletion of natural resources like soils and forests allied to impacts like climate change can destabilise communities, even entire nations," he said.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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UN Tackles Ailments Of Poor With New Strategy
United Nations (UPI) Jun 25, 2007
The World Health Organization says it has a new strategy to strengthen and expand the fight against diseases of poverty such as leprosy, onchocerciasis, Chagas disease, lymphatic filariasis and visceral leishmaniasis, all recently brought under control. Onchocerciasis is perhaps better known as river blindness, Chagas disease causes sleeping sickness, lymphatic filariasis can lead to elephantiasis and visceral leishmaniasis triggers fever, weight loss, and an enlarged spleen and liver. All are now targeted for eradication.







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