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Inadequate aid as violence escalates Southern Sudan emergency

Sudan / 14.12.09

Nairobi, 14 December 2009. The people of Southern Sudan are trapped in a worsening crisis, following the most violent year since the 2005 peace agreement that ended more than two decades of civil war with the North. However, the response to the escalating emergency is inadequate, says international medical relief organisation, Médecins Sans Frontières.

In its paper ‘Facing Up To Reality: Health crisis deepens as violence escalates in Southern Sudan’, Médecins Sans Frontières calls on government authorities, international donors and relief organisations to recognise the full extent of the crisis and ensure peoples’ immediate humanitarian needs are urgently prioritised.

“Violence is surging, plunging people from one disaster to the next. Yet immediate needs are not being met,” said Stephan Goetghebuer, Médecins Sans Frontières director of operations for Sudan. “A better response to this growing emergency is crucial, or clinics will continue to run out of vital medicines, gunshot patients will still reach medical care many days after attacks and countless others will receive no care at all.”

Over the last year Médecins Sans Frontières witnessed a disturbing deterioration in the security situation in Southern Sudan, from increasing clashes in Upper Nile, Jonglei, Lakes and Central Equatoria States, to attacks by Ugandan rebel group, the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) in the Equatoria States,

The violent clashes in Jonglei and Upper Nile States that Médecins Sans Frontières responded to, suggest a more serious trend than traditional ‘cattle-rustling’. Villages, rather than cattle camps, were often attacked, with women and children the majority of victims. In these attacks, three times more people were killed than wounded, and 87 percent of those Médecins Sans Frontières treated had gunshot wounds. Médecins Sans Frontières provided 1,426 surgeries in the first ten months of 2009 in those two states alone, more than the total 1,271 surgical interventions for six states in 2008.

“The intensity of this year’s violence has severe consequences,” said Shelagh Woods, Médecins Sans Frontières Deputy Head of Mission. “We treat injured women who lost entire families, children with legs destroyed by bullets, people who fled without time to bury loved ones. People do not feel safe and live in constant fear of attacks.”

The violence has displaced up to 250,000 people, who live in precarious conditions where disease thrives and malnutrition is a grave risk. In the first ten months of 2009, Médecins Sans Frontières admitted 11,129 patients with severe malnutrition to its clinics, compared to 6,139 admissions for all 2008.

The rising violence aggravates the already dire medical situation in Southern Sudan, where 75 percent of people have no access to even the most basic healthcare, and where large-scale outbreaks of diseases threaten lives. Médecins Sans Frontières already treated 175 patients in the first six weeks of an outbreak of kala-azar - a fatal, if untreated, parasitic disease – compared to 127 for the whole of 2008.

However, the focus of international donors on longer term development remains disproportionate to that on immediate humanitarian aid.

“Alarm bells must ring when only a handful of agencies are mobilising to respond to serious needs on time. Development alone is not enough in Southern Sudan. Emergency preparedness and humanitarian action must be priorities,” adds Stephan Goetghebuer.

For more information, please contact Sally McMillan, Press Officer, +61 447 482 379

Médecins Sans Frontières, the emergency medical humanitarian organisation, has been working in Sudan since 1979. The organisation currently has permanent projects in Red Sea State, Northern Darfur, Western and Central Equatoria, Northern Bahr-el-Ghazal, Warrap, Jonglei, Unity and Upper Nile States and Abyei. Médecins Sans Frontièresalso runs emergency projects in other areas. Médecins Sans Frontièresis an independent and neutral aid agency that serves all people based on medical need, regardless of tribe, race, political or religious affiliation.

  

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