Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Crisis in South Sudan

On 24 March, a child displaced by recent fighting stands in the town of Mingkaman, where humanitarian assistance is being provided.
A South Sudanese child displaced by recent fighting in Mingkaman, where UNICEF is providing humanitarian assistance.

Conflict leaves 3.75 million children in need of help; famine is the newest threat they face.

Six months of conflict in the young country of South Sudan has placed 6 million South Sudanese in need of humanitarian assistance—half of them children. These children and their families were already struggling with basic needs following decades of civil war.

The fighting has forced more than 1.3 million people to flee their homes in search of safety—including 550,000 children. More than half are internally displaced, living out in the open—in increasingly worsening conditions as the rainy season begins. Cholera outbreaks have been confirmed in Juba and two South Sudanese states.

The conflict has torn apart South Sudan's agriculture-based economy. With farmers unable to plant crops, food is growing exceedingly scarce. The U.N. warns of a situation that could turn "more grave than anything the continent has seen since the mid-1980s." 4 million people may be pushed close to starvation by year's end. Unless malnutrition treatment is scaled up immediately, 50,000 children are likely to die.

The lifeblood of survival in South Sudan 




Africa|Food Crisis Worsens in South Sudan as Civil War Is Displacing Millions
Continue reading the main story
Photographs: Crisis in South Sudan
   Internally displaced people wait to register for food distribution at a camp at the base of the United Nations Mission in South Sudan in Bentiu, South Sudan. Five months of civil war in South Sudan have led to the death of thousands and the displacement of more than one million people. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times
Severely malnourished Nyajuba, 2, is held by her mother, Elizabeth Garyang, as she is weighed in the outpatient department of Doctors Without Borders in the camp for internally displaced from Juba, at the base of the United Nations Mission. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times
Simon Kwoltop, 22, grinds sorghum in a camp for internally displaced Nuer at the base of the United Nations Mission in Bentiu. The civil war erupted in December, when clashes broke out between soldiers loyal to President Salva Kiir and those loyal to his former vice president, Riek Machar. The conflict soon took on an ethnic dimension, pitting South Sudan’s two largest groups, the Dinka and the Nuer, against each other. Mr. Kiir is a Dinka, while Mr. Machar is a Nuer. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times
Elizabeth Skutey, 18, from Mayoum, waits for water with other internally displaced people at the base of the United Nations Mission in Bentiu. “If the conflict continues, half of South Sudan’s 12 million people will either be displaced internally, refugees abroad, starving or dead by the year’s end,” Secretary General Ban Ki-moon warned the United Nations Security Council this month. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times
Internally displaced men slaughter two cows on the perimeter of the camp inside the base of the United Nations Mission in Bentiu. So many people have been displaced by the fighting that the planting season was seriously disrupted, creating major concerns about the next harvest. Fisherman cannot work the rivers. Livestock have been lost and abandoned. Cholera has broken out in the capital, Juba, and threatens other parts of the county. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times
Jay Thiep, a government soldier who was found unconscious near the airport suffering from severe malnutrition, sat in front of a tent clinic at the base of the United Nations Mission in South Sudan in Bentiu. Mr. Thiep was thought to have been hiding without food for roughly three weeks in the bush following a retreat of government soldiers from Bentiu. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times
Bakhita Peter, 19, who is malnourished, sits with her child, Ajak Deng, 5 months, who is being treated for malnutrition and additional complications at a tent hospital run by Doctors Without Borders at the base of the United Nations Mission base in Malakal, in the Upper Nile region. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times
Nyajuba is held by her mother as she is measured in the outpatient department of Doctors Without Borders in the camp for internally displaced at the base of the United Nations Mission in Juba. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times
A displaced boy collects water from puddles at dawn at the base of the United Nations Mission in Bentiu. “There is every likelihood that the worst  food crises in South Sudan’s history can happen,” said Hilde Johnson, chief of the United Nations mission in South Sudan. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times
Internally displaced civilians live in rudimentary conditions in the camp at the base of the United Nations Mission base in Juba. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times
Internally displaced men carry bags of sorghum during a food distribution at the base of the United Nations Mission in Bentiu. Delivering assistance to populations in need also faces challenges. With the rainy season underway, South Sudan’s mostly dirt roads become impassible. River barges at times have come under fire. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times
Internally displaced people wait to register for a food distribution at a camp at the base of the United Nations Mission in Bentiu. “South Sudan needs help,” said Dr. Barnaba Benjamin, South Sudan’s foreign minister. But given the scale of the crisis, even if donors meet their target goal and act quickly, it may be too late for some. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times
Workers clean up the ransacked remains of the teaching hospital in Malakal, in the Upper Nile region, after parts of it were burned, looted, and more than a dozen patients were shot in their hospital beds. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times
A human skull and a body bag are among the remains of the ransacked teaching hospital in Malakal. After several bloody, back-and-forth battles for control of the city between rebels and the government, nearly all residents have left. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times 

No comments:

Post a Comment