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November 2006 |
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| © Jehad Nga |
It took Chai four hours of stumbling through mud to cart
her sick husband in a hammock from her village to the main road. It then
cost her an entire week’s wages she would normally reserve for food
to flag down a car to get to the hospital. But when she arrived, exhausted
and terrified, the hospital told her they would refuse to treat her husband’s
malaria until she paid up. In a panic, she sent her children back to the
village (another week’s savings and half day’s trek) to try
and rustle up some money. By the time they returned the next morning
he was dead.
It is early afternoon in the Ramadeqai camp for the displaced on the
outskirts of the town of Zalingei in the troubled Darfur region of Sudan.
The inhabitants, entering the last days of the Ramadan fast, are sweltering
under the October sun. You can feel the lethargy that’s descended.
Around 90,000 displaced live in the four camps surrounding Zalingei.
The makeshift shelters have been their homes since conflict broke out
in Darfur early 2003. There have been no distributions of shelter materials
for over 18 months and their wood, earth and tarpaulin homes look bedraggled.
People fled to the camps looking for protection from the forces that
had driven them from their villages. Instead, they found that those same
forces encircled the camps, sowing fear and turning their refuge into
a place of continuing terror.
Today, in conjunction with the Ministry of Health, MSF runs the 155-bed
hospital in Zalingei, which is free and accessible in theory for both
the residents of the town and the displaced in the camps. But even this
is fraught with problems.
“The camp is like an outdoor prison,” explains MSF medical
co-ordinator Severine Ramon. “Women are raped when they collect
firewood, armed groups roam the camp at night spreading fear among the
people and men are afraid of leaving the camp to walk 20 minutes to get
medical care in the hospital in town.”
Despite concern over access, the hospital carries out nearly 2000 consultations
per month, of which around 30 are for children with a combination of
malnutrition linked to illness. Victims of sexual violence also get care,
although the number of people treated is unlikely to represent the scale
of the problem.
“In September we treated six rape victims,” continues Severine
Ramon, “but we fear that there may be many more who refuse to come
forward because they are afraid to do so.”
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| © Jehad Nga |
The difficulty that patients of all kinds have in getting medical
care is partly the result of the problems aid agencies have in reaching
out to them. Since the beginning of 2006, MSF teams have been the victims
of over 40 security incidents of varying severity, many of which have
taken place on the roads supposedly under control of the Khartoum government.
The insecurity means that today, MSF is only able to use one road in
the whole of Darfur, an area the size of France. All other transport
is carried out by UN helicopter or plane. While MSF is still running
major healthcare projects in 12 locations across the region, the result
has been that many essential programmes, such as mobile clinics outside
towns, have been suspended.
Simple but life-saving referrals have also become a near impossibility.
For surgical cases for example, until recently MSF was able to refer
patients the 60 kilometres from its health centre in Niertiti to the
hospital in Zalingei in an MSF vehicle. Following a serious security
incident along this road in September, the referral service was discontinued
and now patients have to rely on private transport.
“With MSF transport, this journey would take about an hour. With
the lorries that serve as public transport, it can take up to ten. For
a woman in urgent need of a caesarean this can have serious consequences,” explains
Severine Ramon.
Some programmes such as Korma in north Darfur have had to be completely
closed because of the insecurity, seriously reducing the access of people
to healthcare. In September, a series of violent incidents forced MSF
to withdraw from Kutrum in the Jebel Mara in the midst of a cholera outbreak
after a series of incidents.
As MSF head of mission Jean-Sebastien Matte explains, “we have
not had access to the rebel areas in the Jebel Mara for more than six
weeks. We managed to care for about 500 cases of cholera before then,
but there were certainly 300 to 400 more that we were unable to see.
This means that these people may have died because a lack of medical
care. Cholera can be rapidly treated but if there is no way to do so,
then it kills you quickly. Today, we are not sure of the mortality rates,
but we can only imagine that they are significant.”
Since the western-backed Darfur Peace Agreement was signed in May 2006,
the situation in the region has undoubtedly worsened. The number of groups
involved in the fighting has multiplied and renewed fighting has begun
between the government and groups opposed to the DPA. The resultant increase
in insecurity means that across large swathes of Darfur, MSF is unable
to even monitor the health situation.
The atmosphere in Darfur has been further polarized by the recent tensions
over the illusion of an intervention from a UN peacekeeping force. Heated
rhetoric from both sides of the debate has had consequences on the ground,
with the Khartoum government stepping up its propaganda against what
it terms as foreign meddling. NGOs have been amongst the first to face
this wrath and false hopes have arisen amongst much of the population.
The tension has served to further tie the hands of independent and impartial
aid work.
“We have very limited access to the north of Darfur. So we don’t
even know what kind of state the people in some areas are in, whether
they have access to water, health or food. Neither the government nor
the different rebel groups give us the access we need; we are targeted
from all corners. There is no question that we are unable to function
as we would like,” concludes Jean Sebastien Matte.
The consequences for the people of Darfur, themselves faced with increased
tension and violence, are worrying. Few in the area itself see any reason
to believe that the situation is going to improve in the near future.
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