The World Food Programme (WFP) said on Tuesday that food assistance for hundreds of thousands of Sudanese refugees in Chad, some of whom are on the verge of starvation, may cease next month if more cash was not provided.
Over 500,000 Sudanese migrants have crossed the long desert border to Chad since fighting broke out in their nation almost a year ago, making it one of the biggest refugee hotspots in Africa with over a million refugees overall.
However, the WFP claims that feeding them all is a struggle and that many of them have already started missing meals. Severe anaemia affects about half of Sudanese refugee children under five years old.
“We’ve already cut our operations in ways that would have been unthinkable just a few years ago, leaving hungry people close to starvation,” said Pierre Honnorat, WFP’s Representative and Country Director in Chad. “We need donors to prevent the situation from becoming an all-out catastrophe.”
The WFP stated that a supply route from Chad into Sudan’s Darfur, where famine is increasing, is also under jeopardy because of financial constraints.
More funding would enable WFP to stockpile food supplies before the rainy season, which is when some of Chad’s refugee populations are shut off from supplies by muddy rivers. To guarantee continued support over the ensuing six months, the organisation is desperately requesting $242 million.
More than a million people have fled to neighbouring countries since the brutal conflict in Sudan started in April 2023. Among them are about 378,000 Sudanese refugees and about 48,000 Chadians who were forced to return to eastern Chad.