Last reviewed: 17-03-2009
The United Nations has described Sudan's western Darfur region as one of the world's worst humanitarian crises.
- 2.7 million uprooted
- World's biggest relief operation
- 2006 peace deal failed to improve security
The conflict flared in 2003 when rebels in Darfur took up arms, accusing the government of neglecting the region.
Since then, civilians have come under attack from government troops, nomadic militia and rebel groups. The United Nations says as many as 300,000 people may have died. Khartoum puts the figure at 10,000.
The violence has also forced some 2.7 million people - mostly farmers and villagers from non-Arab groups - to flee their homes.
Khartoum denies accusations it has used Arab militias, known as Janjaweed, to crush the revolt.
But in March 2009, the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Sudan's president for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur.
The government and one rebel faction signed a peace deal in May 2006, but two others refused, and many new rebel groups have since formed. Relief agencies say the violence makes it difficult to deliver aid in parts of Darfur.
A combined United Nations-African Union peacekeeping force began deploying in 2008, taking over from a small, overstretched AU force. The deployment follows protracted wrangling between the international community and Khartoum.
The conflict has also spilled over Sudan's borders into Chad and Central African Republic.
(Unless otherwise stated, data is for
October 2008, taken from the Darfur Humanitarian Profile series issued by the United Nations)
| Total no. of people affected by conflict in Darfur: |
4.7 million |
| No. of internally displaced people in Darfur: |
2.7 million (IDMC, 2009) |
| No. of Darfur refugees in Chad: |
240,000 (UNHCR, December 2007) |
| Residential population affected by conflict: |
2 million |
| No. of people receiving food aid: |
3.4 million |
| Percentage of affected population accessible according to U.N. security standards: |
65 percent |
| Malnutrition (acute): |
16.1 percent (2007) (U.N. report, Jan 2008) |
| Mortality: |
0.29 per 10,000 people per day (2007) (U.N. report, Nov 2007) |
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