TRAID Textile recycling for Aid and International Development

"We place great emphasis on coordinating our work with the communities that we are trying to help, that way, we can make sure that we are really addressing their needs" - Oxfam's Charles Dashe (pictured).

Photo Credit: Alun McDonald/Oxfam

Eastern Chad, Collecting water in D'jabal Camp - Oxfam is delivering safe clean drinking water to people living the camps.
Photo Credit: Pablo Tosco/Oxfam

Mud and water being mixed with animal dung ready for brick making.  Brick making is one of the livelihoods people are engaged in, at the Kalma Camp, near Nyala.

Photo Credit: Jane Beesely/Oxfam

Many young children have grown up in the camps and are reaching their fifth birthdays, not knowing another way of life.

Photo Credit: Pablo Tosco/Oxfam

 

Project Update 2008 - Oxfam

Crisis in Darfur - Fifth Anniversary Update, April 2008

April marks the five-year anniversary of the Darfur crisis, and also a year since Oxfam’s appeal, supported by TRAID, to raise further awareness and funds for the continued humanitarian crisis. The suffering and devastation still continues on an unimaginable scale. Violence has left over 4 million people in need of aid and forced 2.5 million to escape their homes and seek refuge in vast, crowded camps both in Darfur and across the border in Chad. These numbers continue to rise, as thousands more flee the ongoing violence every month. 

Oxfam in Darfur

Oxfam's current programmes are designed not only to keep people healthy and reduce disease, but also to help people maintain their basic human dignity.

 

Provision of clean safe water

Oxfam has been able to deliver clean drinking water by drilling hundreds of boreholes, and constructing pumps and tap-stands that communities can easily operate and maintain themselves. Over the past year, clean and safe drinking water has been provided to over 400,000 displaced people living in camps across Darfur. Each person has been provided with an average of 11.5 litres of water each day.

Improved sanitation


This is being achieved through building latrines and washing facilities; distributing essential items such as soap, buckets and jerry cans for carrying water; and organising community clean up campaigns in the camps and villages. Across Darfur 435,000 people now have access to adequate sanitary facilities, including latrines and washing facilities

Public Health Promotion

Oxfam train hundreds of community volunteers to educate others about sanitation and personal hygiene, and we recruit attendants from within the camp’s communities to keep toilets and washing facilities clean, and to make sure water sources are protected. Over 10,000 home visits, promoting good hygiene practices, have been made in North Darfur alone over the past year.

 

Rebuilding Livlihoods

Traditional livelihoods of agriculture and trade have been largely destroyed by the conflict. Effectively trapped in the camps, people cannot access their fields and markets without risk of being attacked. Women going out to collect firewood are frequently harassed, assaulted and abducted. Oxfam is working to provide people with the skills and opportunities to gain an income and reduce the dependency on external aid. For example, by training plumbers, welders, builders, vets and carpenters; and by distributing seeds, tools and ploughs in areas where they can be used. Oxfam has also distributed donkeys and animals.

 

Looking to the future

Oxfam is planning to provide humanitarian assistance to displaced people in Darfur and Chad for the foreseeable future. Two million people are likely to remain in the camps for some time to come. The international community must do more to bring about three key changes that will improve the lives of civilians. Oxfam is calling for:

To find out more or to make a donation visit Oxfam


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