Atrocious conditions in Aburoc force 20,000 people into Sudan

ArticleComments (0)EmailPrintSaveMay 11, 2017 (JUBA) –

More than 20,000 South Sudanese citizens have absconded from Aburoc’s
Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp due to the constant fighting and
dreadful living conditions around the IDP camps, the medical charity, MSF,
said.

IDPs based in Aburoc take shelter under a tree. When people arrived from
Kodok few had shelter (Anthony Jouannic/MSF)

The displaced citizens made their way to Sudan’s already overcrowded
refugee camps.According to MSF, while others decided to stay in Aburoc in
hopes they will receive clean water, food and shelter, an estimated 18,000
people headed to the north.“The reasons why we are leaving are mainly
security and the lack of food and water. We feel a bit better in Sudan
because we are receiving support, and now I am with my family,” a refugee
who journeyed to Sudan to the medical charity.

MSF said it decided on 11 May to keep providing care for those in Aburoc
even when fighting in the nearby town of Kodok two weeks ago displaced more
than 20,000.The organisation’s head of mission for South Sudan, Marcus
Bachmann said that many people had taken their personal possessions with
the aims of heading north.“Most of the people we see around Aburoc have
packed their few belongings and are waiting for space on a truck departing
for the north. Nearly all of those leaving have been forced to abandon
their homes and have moved places several times in the past,” said
Bachmann, adding "While food has arrived in Aburoc’s market from Sudan, the
purity of water and inflation prices still pose a problem".“Until very
recently the population gathering around Aburoc were surviving on a maximum
of 21,000 litres of water a day from three hand pumps. This is only 1.1
litres per person which is below the daily minimum amount needed for
survival, 2.5 litres. The purity of the water is also a concern, as both
humans and animals openly defecate in the areas around the water pumps,"
MSF said in a statement.

The statement further stated that the availability of water was low, along
with the scarcity in sanitation supplies and shelter.Humanitarian
organisations have reportedly started deploying to the affected areas but
poor weather conditions make it difficult to assist those who have been
displaced.MSF says it manages a hospital in Sudan’s White Nile State, and
when the emergency started, the medical organisation dispatched a team of
30 medical staff to Khor Waral to work in close collaboration with Sudanese
authorities.

(ST)

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