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The humanitarian crisis in Sudan's western Darfur region could drag into late 2006 if peace and security do not return, the British-based international aid agency Oxfam warned Monday. "Over two million people in Darfur are almost completely dependent on external assistance," said Paul Smith-Lomas, Oxfam's regional director for East Africa, based in Nairobi. "Most of the displaced people still do not feel safe enough to return home," he said in a statement.
"If they miss this year's planting season, the next harvest won't be until October 2006. An end to the fighting is urgently needed so people can begin to rebuild their lives."
Oxfam's grim warning came four days after the African Union decided to more than double the strength of its peace-monitoring mission in Darfur to 7,731 personnel within five months.
For its part, Sudan said Saturday that it has withdrawn its troops from four positions in Darfur, conceding to demands made by the African Union at abortive peace talks with rebels last November.
As many as 300,000 people have died since the Sudanese government unleashed Arab militias in a scorched-earth campaign against Darfur's ethnic minorities following the launch of a rebel uprising two years ago.
Some two million others have fled their homes.
Oxfam said it was sending two planeloads of vital aid supplies to Darfur and another two to neighbouring Chad, where it said refugees in overcrowded camps face water shortages and disease.
"Over two million people in Darfur are almost completely dependent on external assistance," Smith-Lomas said. "Aid workers are doing all they can to help, but it simply isn't enough."
One of the Oxfam flights was to set off Monday for El Fasher in North Darfur with 34 tonnes of water and sanitation equipment to provide drinking water to more than 200,000 refugees.
In London, more than 250 refugees from Darfur protested outside Downing Street, the residence of Prime Minister Tony Blair, to demand 30 million pounds (44 million euros, 57 million dollars) to fund an expanded peacekeeping force.
They staged the "die-in" by lying on the pavement and brandishing placards bearing names of the conflict's victims.
Among the protesters was political rap star Emmanuel Jal, 25, a one-time rebel child soldier in southern Sudan, whose song "Gua" - the Arabic word for power - is currently topping the Kenyan music charts.
"The people in Darfur are crying out for peace and I feel their pain because the same happened to me some years back," Jal said.
"The British are respected in Sudan, and we believe the British can play a part in bringing peace to my troubled country."

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2005

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