Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05NDJAMENA1757
2005-12-12 10:18:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Ndjamena
Cable title:  

USAID/OFDA PROGRAMMING IN EASTERN CHAD

Tags:  EAID SOCI PREF PREL CD USAID 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.

121018Z Dec 05


ACTION AF-00 

INFO LOG-00 AID-00 A-00 CA-00 CIAE-00 INL-00 DODE-00 
 DS-00 EAP-00 EB-00 EUR-00 E-00 UTED-00 VCI-00 
 FDRE-01 H-00 TEDE-00 INR-00 IO-00 LAB-01 L-00 
 M-00 VCIE-00 NEA-00 NSAE-00 ISN-00 NSCE-00 OIC-00 
 OMB-00 NIMA-00 EPAU-00 PA-00 MCC-00 PM-00 GIWI-00 
 PRS-00 P-00 ISNE-00 SP-00 IRM-00 SSO-00 SS-00 
 TRSE-00 FMP-00 EPAE-00 IIP-00 SCRS-00 PMB-00 DSCC-00 
 PRM-00 DRL-00 G-00 NFAT-00 SAS-00 SWCI-00 /002W
 ------------------6CF589 121214Z /38 
FM AMEMBASSY NDJAMENA
TO SECSTATE WASHDC 2715
AMEMBASSY NAIROBI 
INFO AMEMBASSY ACCRA 
AMEMBASSY BAMAKO 
AMEMBASSY BRUSSELS 
AMEMBASSY DAKAR 
AMEMBASSY KHARTOUM 
AMEMBASSY LIBREVILLE 
AMEMBASSY NIAMEY 
AMEMBASSY ROME 
AMEMBASSY YAOUNDE 
USEUCOM VAIHINGEN GE
USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 
USMISSION GENEVA
UNCLAS NDJAMENA 001757 

SIPDIS


STATE FOR AF/C, AF/EPS, EB AND PRM;
USAID/W FOR DCHA/AA MHESS; DAA WGARVELINK; DAA LROGERS;
DCHA/OFDA GGOTTLIEB; MMARX; IMACNAIRN; DLILLIE; PWANEK;
ESIMOES; MLUTZ;
DCHA/FFP JDWORKEN
ACCRA FOR USAID/WARP
BRUSSELS FOR USEU PLERNER
GENEVA FOR NKYLOH
KHARTOUM FOR MBEERS; KFARNSWORTH
NAIROBI FOR USAID/OFDA JMYER AND USAID/RFFPO NESTES
DAKAR FOR RFFPO
LIBREVILLE FOR REO, M. CASSETTA
ROME FOR FODAG
USUN FOR TMALY

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: EAID SOCI PREF PREL CD USAID
SUBJECT: USAID/OFDA PROGRAMMING IN EASTERN CHAD

REF: A) NDJAMENA 01741, B) NDJAMENA 01708

-------
SUMMARY
-------

UNCLAS NDJAMENA 001757

SIPDIS


STATE FOR AF/C, AF/EPS, EB AND PRM;
USAID/W FOR DCHA/AA MHESS; DAA WGARVELINK; DAA LROGERS;
DCHA/OFDA GGOTTLIEB; MMARX; IMACNAIRN; DLILLIE; PWANEK;
ESIMOES; MLUTZ;
DCHA/FFP JDWORKEN
ACCRA FOR USAID/WARP
BRUSSELS FOR USEU PLERNER
GENEVA FOR NKYLOH
KHARTOUM FOR MBEERS; KFARNSWORTH
NAIROBI FOR USAID/OFDA JMYER AND USAID/RFFPO NESTES
DAKAR FOR RFFPO
LIBREVILLE FOR REO, M. CASSETTA
ROME FOR FODAG
USUN FOR TMALY

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: EAID SOCI PREF PREL CD USAID
SUBJECT: USAID/OFDA PROGRAMMING IN EASTERN CHAD

REF: A) NDJAMENA 01741, B) NDJAMENA 01708

--------------
SUMMARY
--------------


1. Approximately 200,000 Sudanese refugees currently
live in reasonable but delicate harmony with their
Chadian hosts in an arid and undeveloped environment.
Potential problems revolve around use of natural
resources, jealousy and political developments in Sudan
and Chad. UNHCR and its partners are doing a good job
of reaching out to the host population, but expectations
are high. Coordination of efforts on behalf of the
local population needs to be improved. Security is
good, especially the lack of banditry, for the moment,
but could deteriorate rapidly. The USG should continue
to support efforts on behalf of refugee and host
populations, and to closely monitor developments.


2. A USG team consisting of USAID/OFDA Nairobi-based
Principal Regional Advisor Jack Myer and Embassy
Ndjamena Assistance Officer Leslie McBride traveled in
areas of eastern Chad affected by the presence of
Sudanese refugees November 17-25. The two objectives of
the trip were to assess relations between the refugees
and the local Chadian population and to monitor
USAID/OFDA-funded projects in the area. This cable
reports on the first objective. End Summary.

--------------
A ROAD TRIP THROUGH EASTERN CHAD
--------------


3. Myer and McBride first flew to Bahai near the
Chad/Sudan border in the northern (BET) region and then
drove to Abeche (capital of Ouaddai region) via Tine,
Iriba and Guereda. Road travel was facilitated by the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
and air travel by UNHCR and the U.N. World Food Program
(WFP).


4. The entire area is under U.N. security phase-three,
and vehicle convoy, radio-check and day-time travel
protocols were observed. No security incidents occurred

during the trip and there was minimal local security
presence.


5. The team met with local authorities including the
governors of Wadi Firah and Ouaddai regions, prefects of
Dar Tama and Dar Sila departments, the sub-prefect of
Bahai and the delegate of the Ministry of Plan and
Economic Cooperation for Ouaddai and Wadi Firah regions.
It also met the traditional Sultans of Bahai (President
Deby's brother),Iriba (Dar Zaghawa),Guereda (Dar Tama)
and Goz Beida (Dar Sila),and a number of chefs de
canton and village chiefs. In each stop it was hosted
and briefed by UNHCR officials and NGO representatives,
and spoke with refugees and local people.

-------------- -
200,000 Refugees, Few Chadians, No Development
-------------- -


6. Factors affecting the situation and thus relations
between the refugees and local people include the
weather, the environment, jealousy over assistance


levels, access to basic services, ethnic rivalry,
traditional rustling, poverty, and external factors
including the political situation in Chad, the evolution
of the conflict in Darfur, use of camps by Darfur
rebels, and Chadian rebel activity.


7. The eastern part of Chad where Sudanese victims of
the conflict in Darfur have taken refuge is mostly arid
and semi-arid, experiencing an average of between 200
and 600 m of rain per year. The local people struggle
tosurvive through animal husbandry and occasional ran-
fed agriculture in good years, supplemented i some
areas by recessional agriculture and marketgardens.
Although they are ethnically related inmany cases, the
number of ethnic groups and distibution of refugees
means that some refugees are located in areas of groups
not related to them.


8. The 200,000 refugees are located in 12 camps
scattered along the border area. From north to south
the environment is progressively less arid, but is
subject to a single rainy season each year and many
months of increasing dryness. The 2005 rains were the
best in five, 15 or 70 years depending on where and who
was asked. Regardless, local people could be seen in
all areas harvesting the rain-fed millet they plant each
year in hopes of getting enough, properly distributed
rain to produce a crop.


9. The camps are now for the most part fully developed.
In the six camps visited no lines for water were
observed, and most refugees had built mud walls and had
vegetable gardens around their huts, signs that there is
enough water. WFP had adequate warehouses, community
services are developed, NGOs are managing health
facilities and the unarmed Chadian gendarme force in the
camp seemed respected by the refugees, and had minimal
security around their camps.


10. Friction between the refugees and local population
has reduced as the refugees access what they need in the
camps, with the exception of firewood. In fact, water
and health services in the camps have been extended to
local people in many cases.


11. Compared to services available in the camps, the
villages in the area are severely undeveloped. Few have
health facilities or schools, and most depend on shallow
wells dug in dry riverbeds (wadis) or distant boreholes
for their water needs. In the rainy season most rely on
surface water. Respiratory diseases in the dry season
and water-borne diseases in the rainy season, as well as
malaria are the principal health problems reported in
the area. Late in the dry season malnutrition is
usually a problem.


12. Relations between the refugee and local communities
in the areas visited were reported by most local
interlocutors as currently good and certainly appeared
so to the USG team. However, there have been tensions
in the past and the potential for problems still exists.
For example, the UNHCR Head of Field Office (HOFO) in
Iriba said that the mere rumor of a refugee child being
killed by a car in a nearby village caused a refugee mob
to attempt to lynch villagers. Other incidents include
cattle rustling and fights over water sources.



13. Refugee use of scarce natural resources, especially
firewood, remains a source of tension. Refugee women go
out to collect firewood, competing in the harsh
environment with local people, angry that their precious
natural resource is being consumed. Although UNHCR has
thought about substituting kerosene stoves, it does not
have the funds to provide the 40,000 or so refugee
families with a stove and steady fuel supply. It has
started distributing a German made, efficient wood stove
(the SAVE 80 model),but again lacks the resources to
provide them for all the refugees, who will still
require wood in any case. Most camps access water from
boreholes, and the local population is acutely aware of
the risk that the water table will drop as a result.


14. As services for refugees have improved, the risk of
tension related to jealousy on the part of unassisted
host populations has increased. To address this, the
humanitarian community is beginning to help provide some
of the needs of the local population.

--------------
The five percent solution
--------------


15. Throughout the region, the awareness on the part of
the international humanitarian community of the need to
take local needs into account struck the team as quite
high. Not only do the humanitarian organizations worry
about this problem, but UNHCR has gone to the extent of
formally dedicating five percent of its budget to
projects that solely benefit the local population. This
is in addition to a policy of allowing local people to
obtain water and health services in the camps, and
hiring and procuring locally where possible.


16. Unfortunately, the laborious bureaucracy involving
Chadian authorities at various levels has slowed the
approval process for the small-scale, quick-impact
projects UNHCR is supporting. The UNHCR Representative
in Chad said she doubts the agency will be able to spend
the budget it has set aside for these activities for
2005 as a result. UNHCR's 2006 budget will most likely
be smaller than 2005, so the five percent will also
shrink, she added.


17. Development priorities as articulated by local
authorities include water, improved agriculture, road
infrastructure, health and education. In most villages
visited this list was topped by water and health.

--------------
COORDINATION
--------------


18. An emerging issue for the humanitarian and
development community working on behalf of local
populations in eastern Chad is coordination. When the
"five percent" program was first proposed, various
levels of government from the prefecture to the capital,
competed to have control of the process. UNHCR firmly
resisted requests from the GOC to turn the funds over to
it, and has settled on a system whereby local UNHCR
offices and prefects or sub-prefects pre-approve
projects. Final approval is then provided by the
governors of the regions involved, with technical input
from the delegates of concerned technical ministries.


19. This system is cumbersome and results in
substantial delays. A further complication is that the
increasing efforts of NGOs on behalf of local
populations using other funding are not subject to this
coordination. At present, each technical ministry has a
delegate in Abeche, charged with coordinating. But the
delegate of the Ministry of Planning and Economy says
that he should also be involved, and currently is not.
He also complained of the lack of resources available to
the delegations, and occasional NGO "end-runs" around
the regional delegations directly to prefectural or
lower level authorities for coordination or approval.


20. On the other hand, the delegate and NGOs both
admit, the technical coordination is so far adequate,
and bypassing the regional and national authorities
removes many of the delays haunting UNHCR.


21. This issue has been taken up by the U.N. country
team in Ndjamena, the UNHCR Representative told the USG
team. The U.N. has been discussing an enhanced
coordination role for the U.N. in supporting non-refugee
activities. Either the U.N. Office for the Coordination
of Humanitarian Affairs, or the U.N. Development Program
could take on some of this role. Notably, neither has a
field presence. Interlocutors in Abeche, including the
delegate for the Ministry of Plan and Economy, said they
would welcome such a development.

--------------
Security
--------------


22. The security situation in eastern Chad requires the
closest of monitoring. At the moment, the entire area
is under U.N. phase three, which makes it relatively
easy to implement programs with modest procedures.
However, latent tensions between refugees and Chadians,
political developments in Chad and the ongoing war in
Darfur could all easily tip the balance.


23. Fighting in Darfur shows no signs of decreasing,
and rebel movements are split. It is commonly believed
that rebels travel back and forth to the camps for "R
and R", and that there are arms in some camps. If this
group decided to use them in Chad, for political or
banditry purposes, security could deteriorate. Recent
defections from the Chadian army in the area also worry
aid workers. If the defectors numbers grow, they and
Chadian rebels thought to be operating in western Darfur
could cause insecurity in the area.


24. Hitherto there has been little banditry or
targeting of relief workers. The NGO International
Medical Corps (IMC) had one vehicle stolen November 10,
the only such incident directly affecting the
humanitarian community. The vehicle was recovered in
Darfur and returned by the Chadian army. More recently,
another vehicle belonging to the GOC was also stolen
from this region. However, with the number of guns
thought to be in the region, and the attractiveness of
NGO assets especially the dozens of new Toyota four-
wheel drive vehicles and communications equipment to
bandits and rebels alike, the risk is there.


25. The "five percent" and other efforts on behalf of


the Chadian population is having a good impact in giving
the local population an interest in ensuring assistance
organizations can do their work. If priorities or
budgets shift away from the locals, an increase in
banditry or other security problems is likely.


26. UNHCR is keenly aware of the security risks in the
area and, aside from ensuring the safety of its staff,
facilities and operations through MOSS compliance, has
conducted several security assessments and will continue
to do so.

--------------
Observations
--------------


27. Throughout the trip, the USG team observed what
appeared to be close and collaborative relations between
NGOs and the U.N. agencies working in eastern Chad,
especially UNHCR. A visitor gets a strong sense of the
unity of purpose amongst the organizations. The result
is that the international humanitarian community is seen
as one by refugees and Chadians alike, facilitating the
task of assisting both. This is due, the USG team
believes, to the strong leadership provided by UNHCR in
the area. It is also attributable to several of the
NGOs providing assistance to both refugee and local
populations.


28. The positive attitude towards local Chadian
development problems has created a conceptual link
between the refugee presence and development efforts,
which will help ensure that organizations involved in
development receive a good welcome locally. The U.N.
has decided to beef up its presence in the east in a big
way, with the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO),UNICEF and the U.N. Population Fund opening
permanent offices in Abeche for the first time, joining
WFP which has been in the region for 15 years and UNHCR.
The challenge of finding funds for development
activities will continue, but their presence in the
region may help.


29. The UNHCR and associated operations have been
relatively well funded to date. However, budget cuts
will be inevitable (indeed, NGOs were informed at a
meeting in Abeche November 24 that UNHCR's budget will
be significantly reduced for 2006) and the tension that
will bring within organizations, among organizations,
and with beneficiaries and authorities will need to be
carefully managed. The operation is probably at a peak
currently, in terms of good will and positive image.


30. Expectations are high amongst both populations that
assistance will continue to be provided. Regardless of
the evolution of budgets, expectations will have to be
managed.


31. The USG team was struck by the high quality of
international and local staff engaged by the
humanitarian organizations, and by the high number of
Africans serving as international staff. Individuals
from numerous countries hit by previous humanitarian
crises have managed to parlay their experience as local
staff at home into international careers. This fact is
not lost on the Chadians they deal with, and has
facilitated the work of their organizations.



32. One aspect of the refugee impact on eastern Chad is
the influence refugees have on the local people. In
several of the USG team's stops, they were told that the
Sudanese use more advanced arid-land agricultural
techniques which Chadian farmers are beginning to mimic.
Another example is that Sudanese Arabic words and
expressions are finding their way into Chadian Arabic
usage.

--------------
CONCLUSION
--------------


33. Eastern Chad has, with a few notable exceptions,
been neglected for a long time by development actors,
including the GOC. The arrival of over 200,000 refugees
from the Darfur region of Sudan to this delicate arid
environment has brought local development problems into
focus. But it has also created jealousy and tension
between the local Chadian population and the refugees.


34. The challenge for the GOC and the international
community is to find the resources to not only take care
of the refugees, but to begin the process of developing
this neglected area. If they fail, the delicate balance
prevailing between the two groups may be upset. The USG
should continue supporting programs on behalf of
refugees and the local population, and closely monitor
the situation by traveling to the area on a regular
basis.


35. Minimize Considered.
WALL


NNNN