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P21 - Chad | Dashboard Preliminary results Monitoring Sudan Emergency (from 1st to 21st August 2025)

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Summary

This dashboard summarizes the views of Sudanese refugees, on the situation and protection risks in Chad.
The perceptions of these households, interviewed either at the entry points or at the transit sites, a few days after their arrival in Chad, reflect the trauma of fleeing and the relief of having crossed the border.

From 1 st to 21st August 2025, 650 households of 1,302 individuals were interviewed, including 221 households of 523 individuals at Birak, Kulbus and Tiné entry point in Wadi-Fira province, 334 households of 628 individuals at Adré entry point in Ouaddai province and 95 households of 151 individuals at Bahai and Kariari entry point in Ennedi Est province.

The main trends to be highlighted from the interviews are as follows:

Access to the asylum country - 54% of households surveyed fled Sudan because of insecurity, while 19% cited lack of access to economic opportunities and 15% cited reasons related to preventive leaks.

  • 65% declared that they had been victims of human rights violations during their flight to Chad, including 19% physical attacks and 21% extortion of property.

  • 57% of households surveyed said that members of their family were still in Sudan because of a lack of means of travel (82%) or voluntarily (9%) .
    Education - 58% of households indicated that their children dropped out of school due to the crisis.

  • 98% of households have children at school age.

Child protection * - 48% and 21% of households respectively say they have access to medical services and hygiene services.
Documentation - 9% have birth certificates and17% have citizenship certificate.

  • 55% of households don’t have documents and claimed that their documents were lost or burnt (80%) or confiscated while fleeing to Chad(3%).

Community engagement * - How to access services (41%), services availability (32%) and rights and obligations (18%) are the types of information preferred by the households surveyed