“The media attention and political involvement means that everyone knows about the conflict here, but in the last four years the situation has not improved. In fact for most people things have got worse. Conditions in many of the camps and rural areas have deteriorated and the insecurity is a major concern for ordinary people. People are living in fear. Everyday is a question mark for survival." Introduction Continued Displacement People are still being displaced on an almost daily basis. In many of the places where MSF works new arrivals are putting more pressure on an already fragile situation. “The aid that was implemented in Zalingei (West Darfur) in 2005 is still the same,” explains MSF Medical Coordinator Mathilde Berthelot, “but the situation has changed dramatically. There are now more than 100,000 people here and hundreds of new people have been arriving every month for the last two years. For example, a number of Nomad families have come and settled in a new camp, which is now home to 15,000 people. Some of the newly displaced families have problems registering for food distributions, so the older displaced families have to share their rations with the new comers. Aid organisations need to adapt to the changes that are happening in Darfur” In some parts of Darfur worrying signs of malnutrition are emerging. Food aid is being distributed, but it is not enough. Between July and September 2007 the number of severely malnourished children admitted in Zalingei hospital and Niertiti health centre was three times higher than during the same period in 2006. This is the first time in three years that MSF teams have seen an increase in malnutrition in these areas. MSF has responded by admitting more children into its hospital programme and by opening ambulatory programmes. Hundreds of children are being treated on a weekly basis. Challenges and Frustrations Many towns where MSF works are like enclaves, with the civilian population unable to leave. Patients, especially men, fear for their lives when crossing the frontline from rebel held land into government controlled territory or vice versa. In towns like Kaguro or Kutrum referring patients who need surgery, such as people injured in fighting or women who need caesarean sections, to hospitals in Kebkabiya or Niertiti is difficult. MSF is unable to take them by car as the roads are unsafe. At times MSF staff have not had the facilities or equipment to treat some conditions and have had no option other than suggesting that patients make their own travel arrangements to get to a major government hospital. Unable to provide continuous assistance And Tawila is no exception. The insecurity regularly forces MSF to evacuate its international staff, leaving the population with little or no assistance. The only way that MSF is able to continue providing medical care is through the dedication and hard work of the organisation’s Sudanese staff. When armed groups attacked the town of Muhajariya, in South Darfur, on October 8 and 9, MSF had no choice but to evacuate 16 of its staff. While local Sudanese staff continued to treat around 100 patients a day, more than 35,000 people living in Muhajariya and its immediate vicinity were directly affected by these attacks and were in urgent need of humanitarian assistance. A skeleton team with additional medical supplies returned to the town two weeks later to support the main clinic and continue with mobile clinics for thousands displaced north of town. On the morning of 18 October ongoing tension between different factions inside Kalma camp, one of Darfur’s largest IDP camps, erupted in a violent clash between unidentified armed groups. Thousands of people fled to the surrounding bush and other camps or villages in the area. MSF, which has worked in Kalma since 2004, had to leave the camp to avoid being caught in the crossfire. Three days later the MSF team was able to restart activities and is now carrying out roughly 250 consultations per day, half at a clinic in the camp and half through a mobile team who are trying to reach the people who fled the camp. Large numbers of people appear to have left three of the camp’s eight sectors, they have either moved to other sectors or left the camp. Conclusion
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