FRED DE SAM LAZARO: She's 20, widowed, and five months pregnant as a result of rape. Her anguish is masked by shyness -- her ordeal the legacy of Darfur's brutal civil war.
UNIDENTIFIED RAPE VICTIM (Through Translator): I went with other women to collect firewood. While we were collecting the wood we were surrounded by some Arabs. We all ran, but two men caught me and raped me.
DE SAM LAZARO: For women, gathering firewood for cooking fuel is a perilous chore. They are black Africans pursued by people they call Arabs. Sudan's Arab-dominated government has battled black-led rebel groups in Darfur for at least two years.DAHABIYA SIRRI (Refugee) (Through Translator): It's become common. These people come and ambush us. They rape us. We're very afraid any time we leave the camp. We are very worried here. We cannot sleep at night because the Janjaweed can come at any time and take our daughters and can take our women.
DE SAM LAZARO: Even with the threats and sporadic violence, relief agencies say the situation in Darfur has improved considerably in recent months. When refugees began to arrive late in 2003, there were fears of mass starvation and disease -- all at a time the world seemed preoccupied elsewhere.
MIKE MCDONAGH (Officer, UN Humanitarian Affairs): It was at the same time as the Iraq war was going on, so the cameras of the world were away from it. We were talking about a problem that was put up in front of us in some of the roughest terrain in the world just after a tenuous cease-fire had been signed.DE SAM LAZARO: But McDonagh says the international community did heed the alarm, brokering two cease-fires and trucking in millions of tons of food, much of it American. For now, the feared humanitarian catastrophe has been averted, thanks to this mass infusion of aid.
Today, children attend schools. When they're ill, there are camp clinics. Ironically, their nutrition and health is better than it was prior to the conflict in this impoverished region.
Some 10,000 aid workers have come to Darfur, from dozens of agencies. One of the earliest was Islamic Relief. It is funded largely by Muslims in the West. And because many staff are called as much by faith as professional skill, Islamic Relief works in places many secular groups find too dangerous.
Dr. MOHAMED ABU MAGD (Islamic Relief): If the local staff is willing to stay and willing to take risks, we encourage it. From that point of view, it did help us go into the hardest and most difficult places in the world.DE SAM LAZARO (To Dr. Abu Magd): Such as?
Dr. ABU MAGD: Such as here, such as Iraq and most of [the] countries left, such as Afghanistan, such as Chechnya, such as Kashmir, and the list goes on and on.
DE SAM LAZARO: However, despite the foreign aid and the cease-fire agreements, Darfur remains a dangerous place. The UN says about 200 people are killed each month. Other estimates are higher. Even international aid camps cannot shield residents.
UNIDENTIFIED REFUGEE (Through Translator): We have been attacked by the Janjaweed more than four times. They have stolen sheep, horses, people's belongings.
DE SAM LAZARO: The tension and underlying conflict perplexes many outsiders and Sudanese. Black and Arab -- they're distinguished more by occupation than appearance, and both are Muslim. They have a history of mostly peaceful coexistence.YOUSSIF EL TAYEB (Islamic Relief): It is so difficult to tell the differences between the Arabs from the non-Arabs. What are they going to tell about me? Am I an Arab or an African? Or, what am I? But what makes it so difficult is the people of the same faith are fighting and killing each other. I find it so difficult to put up with what is happening here. Why are Muslims in this place killing each other? What are the motives?




Mr. EL TAYEB: And that's why the farmers fight back, to say, "No, no, it is not your animals, it is my crop." And somebody will not sit and say, "No, no, I cannot see. Okay, in that case, I'll keep my animals here to die of hunger."
SULEIMAN ABD ALLA ADAM (Provincial Governor of Western Darfur) (Through Translator): It's not the government of Sudan, not the government forces but the opposition factions who are responsible for killing the people. They occupy these villages and they use the people in those villages as human shields. Once they antagonize the people toward the government and make them lose confidence, they will be more able to draft the men from these people into the opposition movement.
Colonel LORD SARFO (Section Commander, African Union): The greatest challenge is the terrain. Short distances by you take about, say, two hours to cover a journey of only 40 kilometers. And here to use a helicopter would be a waste of resources.
DE SAM LAZARO: For now, as sporadic fighting and banditry continue, it could take a long time to convince refugees like Sawah al Mansur that it's safe to return. She lost her husband when her village was raided and fled to this camp with her four children. Here, there's some security and enough food. Still, she'd like someday to return home where, she says, she had her dignity.
DE SAM LAZARO: And a key question is how long she'll get even that. Even though the U.S. has pledged more food aid and the African Union said it plans to increase its troop presence, no one expects these refugees to return home anytime soon. Relief agencies also worry that in a world distracted by other crises, this region, isolated with limited media access, will slip from the world's consciousness and back to the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe.