Aid agencies work to stabilize health situation in South Sudan camps

News Stories, 3 August 2012

© UNHCR/V.Tan
A new arrival in South Sudan's Yida camp gets her arm measured as part of malnutrition screening.

JUBA, South Sudan, August 3 (UNHCR) The UN refugee agency has raised the alarm over health conditions among refugees in two South Sudan camps, but stressed that mortality and morbidity rates have stabilized, even dropped with urgent interventions.

The two camps in question are Yida in Unity state and Batil in Upper Nile state, which have been struggling with high rates of malnutrition, disease and death amid a massive influx in recent months and a rainy season that has made aid delivery more difficult.

"Health workers in Yida camp first saw a significant hike in death rates among refugee children in late June and early July. Médecins Sans Frontières reported an average of five children dying every day, mostly from diarrhea and infections," said UNHCR spokeswoman Melissa Fleming at a press briefing in Geneva on Friday.

She added, "In the last three weeks, mortality and morbidity rates have stabilized and even decreased, as aid agencies took urgent action to address the root causes. In addition to providing emergency treatment, the aid agencies are also working to mitigate the risk of water-borne and hygiene-related diseases."

Most of the interventions are preventative. UNHCR is working to double the supply of potable water in Yida by digging six additional boreholes. It is improving drainage systems at all seven water points to reduce the risk of contamination and water-borne diseases from standing water. Community latrines are being built to meet the needs of the growing population. NGO Solidarites has started a 40-day campaign to ensure clean buckets and chlorination at water points. Soap has been distributed and hygiene promotion sessions are ongoing.

Today UNHCR will begin a distribution to more than 8,200 families with children under the age of five. Identified as the most vulnerable in the camp, they will receive soap bars, jerry cans and blankets to improve sanitization and minimize the risk of respiratory infections. The distribution of other supplies such as plastic sheeting and buckets will continue throughout the month.

However, many of the new arrivals in Yida are still sleeping under poorly-thatched roofs, which increase the risk of respiratory illnesses and malaria especially among children under five. UNHCR is planning to airlift an additional 8,500 plastic sheets and 15,000 mosquito nets for immediate distribution.

These are the challenges for Yida, a remote camp close to the border with Sudan. Its refugee population has quadrupled since April to some 60,000 people today, more than one-quarter of them children.

"Most refugees have been arriving in a very weak state exhausted, dehydrated and malnourished," said Fleming. "The rainy season has exacerbated the situation, bringing seasonal diseases to an already fragile population. The rains have also flooded nearby roads and turned Yida into a virtual island. Airlifts are now the only way to get life-saving aid into the camp."

In Upper Nile state, Batil camp is facing similar problems. An estimated one in three children is malnourished. Common health problems in this camp of 35,000 refugees include watery diarrhea, respiratory tract infections and increasingly, malaria.

Last Sunday, aid agencies started a blanket food distribution across the camp, followed by a therapeutic supplementary feeding program to help children recover from moderate acute malnutrition. An additional 12 per cent of children under five are receiving treatment for severe acute malnutrition.

In total, Batil has five clinics for health and nutrition treatments, and 20 oral rehydration points throughout the camp. The health agencies have set up surveillance and response mechanisms for possible outbreaks of diarrhoeal and other diseases.

In the last year, some 170,000 people have fled conflict and food shortages in Sudan's South Kordofan and Blue Nile states and found refuge in South Sudan.

To date, UNHCR has only received US$47.5 million out of the US$186 million it needs to meet the urgent needs of the Sudanese refugees in South Sudan. In a welcome development this week, the Common Humanitarian Fund allocated US$10 million to the refugee emergency in South Sudan, mostly to NGOs working in the areas of health, nutrition, water, sanitation, road access and site preparation.

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International Women's Day 2013

Gender equality remains a distant goal for many women and girls around the world, particularly those who are forcibly displaced or stateless. Multiple forms of discrimination hamper their enjoyment of basic rights: sexual and gender-based violence persists in brutal forms, girls and women struggle to access education and livelihoods opportunities, and women's voices are often powerless to influence decisions that affect their lives. Displaced women often end up alone, or as single parents, battling to make ends meet. Girls who become separated or lose their families during conflict are especially vulnerable to abuse.

On International Women's Day, UNHCR reaffirms its commitment to fight for women's empowerment and gender equality. In all regions of the world we are working to support refugee women's participation and leadership in camp committees and community structures, so they can assume greater control over their lives. We have also intensified our efforts to prevent and respond to sexual and gender-based violence, with a focus on emergencies, including by improving access to justice for survivors. Significantly, we are increasingly working with men and boys, in addition to women and girls, to bring an end to dangerous cycles of violence and promote gender equality.

These photographs pay tribute to forcibly displaced women and girls around the world. They include images of women and girls from some of today's major displacement crises, including Syria, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mali and Sudan.

International Women's Day 2013

The Most Important Thing: Syrian Refugees

What would you bring with you if you had to flee your home and escape to another country? More than 1 million Syrians have been forced to ponder this question before making the dangerous flight to neighbouring Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey, Iraq or other countries in the region.

This is the second part of a project by photographer Brian Sokol that asks refugees from different parts of the world, "What is the most important thing you brought from home?" The first instalment focused on refugees fleeing from Sudan to South Sudan, who openly carried pots, water containers and other objects to sustain them along the road.

By contrast, people seeking sanctuary from the conflict in Syria must typically conceal their intentions by appearing as though they are out for a family stroll or a Sunday drive as they make their way towards a border. Thus they carry little more than keys, pieces of paper, phones and bracelets - things that can be worn or concealed in pockets. Some Syrians bring a symbol of their religious faith, others clutch a reminder of home or of happier times.

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Widow Oumi starts a new life in South Sudan camp

Oumi arrived in Yusuf Batil refugee camp, in South Sudan, after three months on the run. Along the way she gave birth to a son, lost her husband to illness and guided her four children safely across the border from Sudan. The family reared goats, sheep and cattle in their home in Sudan's Blue Nile state before the war came to their village. With her children sick and hungry, Oumi finally found shelter in Yusuf Batil, where she is receiving assistance from UNHCR and its partners.

The widow, who does not know her age, says her life is now in the camp where she cooks for the children and hopes they can all soon start to help her. She says she worries about the future but dreams of being given a plot of land where she can grow sorghum, maize and okra to sell and make enough money to buy some goats. The following pictures depict Oumi and her children in their new home.

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