Soudan : 1,5 milliard de promesse d'aide humanitaire, mais des doutes sur l'impact réel
International donors pledge €1.5 billion for Sudan's humanitarian crisis, but aid workers warn of a critical gap between promises and urgent, on-the-ground needs.
International donors pledge €1.5 billion for Sudan's humanitarian crisis, but aid workers warn of a critical gap between promises and urgent, on-the-ground needs. | Contesto: cronaca
Punti chiave
- Soudan : 1,5 milliard de promesse d'aide humanitaire, mais des doutes sur l'impact réel
Contesto
International donors meeting in Berlin have pledged €1.5 billion in humanitarian aid for Sudan, a country now entering the fourth year of a devastating civil war. The conflict has pushed the majority of its population into severe distress, creating one of the world's most acute humanitarian crises. The funding announcement, aimed at addressing widespread hunger, displacement, and a collapsed healthcare system, was made as the international community seeks to refocus attention on a war that has displaced millions and brought parts of the nation to the brink of famine. While the substantial financial commitment was welcomed, immediate and stark warnings accompanied the pledges. Muriel Boursier, the emergency coordinator for Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) in Darfur, characterized the announcement as positive but critically insufficient. Speaking to France 24, Boursier highlighted a dangerous disconnect between high-level donor conferences and the reality for aid organizations operating inside Sudan. "These donation pledges risk not translating into sufficient means in the coming months to respond to the current crisis, which is urgent," she stated, underscoring the perilous delay between promise and delivery. The context of the Berlin conference underscores the scale of the challenge. The war, which erupted in April 2023 between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, has shattered the nation's infrastructure and economy. Over half of Sudan's population—approximately 25 million people—now require humanitarian assistance to survive. The United Nations has repeatedly warned that the current response is catastrophically underfunded, leaving aid agencies unable to scale up operations to meet the soaring needs. The skepticism voiced by frontline workers like Boursier points to a systemic issue in international crisis response: the gap between pledged funds and disbursed, accessible cash. Historical precedents in other complex emergencies show that donor pledges can be slow to materialize, are often earmarked with restrictions, and face immense logistical and security hurdles before reaching beneficiaries. In Sudan, these...
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Categoria: cronaca