GENEVA / ETHIOPIA CRISIS
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STORY: GENEVA / ETHIOPIA CRISIS
TRT: 2:04
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 27 NOVEMBER 2020 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
1.Exterior shot, Palais des Nations flag alley, nations’ flags flying, a cloudy day.
2.Med shot, TV broadcast in foreground and podium with speakers to rear
3.SOUNDBITE (English) Babar Baloch, spokesperson for UN Office of the High Commissioner for Refugees:
“This morning, a plane carrying 32 tonnes of UNHCR emergency aid from our global stockpiles in Dubai landed in Khartoum. Another airlift is scheduled to leave Dubai on Monday with an additional 100 tonnes of relief items.”
4.Med shot, journalists sitting and using listening devices
5.SOUNDBITE (English) Babar Baloch, spokesperson for UN Office of the High Commissioner for Refugees:
“Aid is being mobilized to help refugees almost half of whom are children. Humanitarian agencies continue to provide shelter and other facilities to help refugees, but more resources are required and Sudan needs international support urgently.”
6.Med shot, journalist typing on laptop
7.SOUNDBITE (English) Babar Baloch, spokesperson for UN Office of the High Commissioner for Refugees:
“This concerns also and worries remain for the refugees, Eritrean refugees who are in…who are in the four refugee camps inside the Tigray; without humanitarian access it’s very hard to say what is actually going on, on the ground but there were worrying reports that fighting was getting closer to these refugee camps.”
8.Med shot, journalist looking at phone and readjusting his glasses
9.SOUNDBITE (English) Babar Baloch, spokesperson for UN Office of the High Commissioner for Refugees:
“And so, before the start of the conflict, I mean we have regular access to the refugees, they are 96,000; since the start of it, we have lost access. We had done… and these refugees rely on the humanitarian distributions. We had done the distribution, we had done before the start of the conflict, according to what they have had is they will be running out of food as of Monday.”
10.Med shot, UN staff member typing on laptop and using listening device
11.Close up, hands typing on laptop
12.Med shot, journalist sitting and typing on laptop
An airplane loaded with humanitarian supplies for people fleeing violence in Ethiopia’s Tigray region has arrived in the Sudanese capital Khartoum, the UN said on Friday, in an appeal for international assistance to cope with the growing number of refugees seeking shelter in Sudan.
“This morning, a plane carrying 32 tons of UNHCR emergency aid from our global stockpiles in Dubai landed in Khartoum,” said UNHCR spokesperson Babar Baloch. “Another airlift is scheduled to leave Dubai on Monday with an additional 100 tonnes of additional relief items…In total, we plan to send four airlifts.”
Since the start of fighting in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region in early November, more than 43,000 refugees have crossed into Sudan.
People have sought shelter amid reports of a heavy build-up of tanks and artillery around regional capital Mekelle, following the Ethiopian Government’s ultimatum to forces loyal to the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) to surrender.
Earlier this week, UN Secretary-General António Guterres expressed deep concern over the unfolding situation, before urging “the leaders of Ethiopia to do everything possible to protect civilians, uphold human rights and ensure humanitarian access for the provision of much-needed assistance”.
In a statement, the UN chief also called for the “free and safe movement of people searching for safety and assistance, regardless of their ethnic identity, across both national and international borders".
Echoing the Secretary-General’s message, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet, warned that both sides were using rhetoric that was “dangerously provocative and risks placing already vulnerable and frightened civilians in grave danger”.
Even before violence erupted in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region causing mass displacement, Sudan was already home to nearly one million refugees, mainly from South Sudan.
In eastern Sudan, UNHCR has continued to step up its relief effort, together with national and local partners. “Aid is being mobilized to help refugees almost half of whom are children,” Baloch said, citing “complex logistical challenges”.
To date the agency has helped to relocate nearly 10,000 refugees to Um Rakuba site, 70 kilometres inside Sudan, as work continues to put up shelters and improve services. Family tracing services have been established and these have already reunited many separated refugees.
Baloch noted that although humanitarian agencies continue to provide shelter and other facilities to help refugees, “more resources are required and Sudan needs international support urgently”.
Inside Tigray region, concerns continue to grow for the safety of civilians in Mekelle, home to more than 500,000 people, and some 96,000 Eritrean refugees based in four camps.
“Without humanitarian access, it’s very hard to say what is actually going on, on the ground but there were worrying reports that fighting was getting closer to these refugee camps” Mr. Baloch told journalists via video link at a regular UN Geneva briefing.
Before the conflict erupted, UNHCR had “regular access to the refugees”, the UNHCR official continued, but “since the start of it, we have lost access”.
Highlighting the refugees’ reliance on humanitarian distributions, Baloch said that “according to what they have had…they will be running out of food as of Monday”.









