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From: "John Ashworth" <[email protected]>
Date: 3 Jun 2017 11:20
Subject: [sudans-john-ashworth] Church provides aid as starvation grips
South Sudan
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Church provides aid as starvation grips South Sudan

By Caritas Internationalis | 2 June 2017

“People can’t afford to buy food, they can’t grow food and aid
agencies can’t deliver enough food to keep them alive,” said Sebastian
Kämpf, who supports Caritas in Wau, South Sudan. “People are already
dying with the worst still ahead.”

The first famine in 6 years was officially declared by the UN in parts
of South Sudan in February, affecting more than 100,000 people. Even
in places where it hasn’t been declared, people die due to hunger
related illnesses. Around 5.5 million people in South Sudan face
severe hunger and 7.5 million are in need of humanitarian aid and
protection.

Starvation is writ large in the children, their bodies bloated by
hunger. Over a quarter of a million of them will be affected by acute
malnutrition this year. “It’s not like an earthquake that kills lots
of people in a day,” said Kämpf. “It’s a slow death as the body
becomes less able to resist disease.”

After decades of war, South Sudan gained independence from Sudan in
2011. There were high hopes for the country. However, rivalry between
the president, Salva Kiir, who is from the Dinka tribe, and his then
vice president, Riek Machar, who is Nuer, descended into ethnic
violence in late 2013. Renewed conflict since mid-2016 has created a
catastrophe of biblical proportions.

In Wau, fighting broke out between government soldiers and opposition
groups leaving more than 400 people dead and forcing 120,000 from
their homes. “Many people came to the large Catholic Church compound,”
said Kämpf. “At the height of crisis there were 25,000 people.”

Fr Moses Peter, the Caritas diocesan emergency coordinator, became the
camp manager. “We had a surplus of food from an ongoing child
malnutrition project which we used to feed the families in the
compound,” he said.

“Then when it became safe for the international aid agencies, we acted
as a coordination point to improve conditions, building latrines,
providing a learning space for children and improving shelter. As
people settled, we could provide shelter, water and food.”

Periodic fighting has continued, with each attack forcing more people
from their homes. The worst was in April, when two army generals were
killed sparking a killing spree by government troops in Wau.

Things have calmed since the introduction of a multi-tribal security
force, but many will not go home. Currently there are 13,000 people in
four different compounds. The main one has 7000 and the others have
about 2000 people each.

“There are a large number of people who prefer to stay in the church
compound or with the UN. Apart from safety, by having somebody in the
compound the family can get food rations,” said Fr. Peter.

Those in the compound only get half rations from the UN’s World Food
Programme. “You’re still losing weight, but it keeps you alive,” said
Kämpf. Funding for the humanitarian response in South Sudan is only
around 14 percent, meaning aid agencies are forced to cut rations.

The lack of law and order also means that huge swathes of the rural
area are cut off. “We don’t know what the situation is like out there,
but we can imagine it’s much worse,” said Kämpf.

Among those who fled and have returned are the Church volunteers.
Before the current crisis, they would help the extremely poor, the
disabled and the elderly.

“When the volunteers made it back from the bush, they continued where
they’d left off with the displaced,” said Kämpf. “For example, it’s
difficult for a disabled person to mill the maize, which is a two hour
back breaking job using stones. So the volunteers help prepare meals.”

South Sudan is the most dangerous country for aid workers to operate.
It is also one of the most expensive. According to research by Caritas
Internationalis provided by members, it is almost 12 times as costly
per beneficiary to implement projects in South Sudan than it is in
Kenya.

The severely under developed and under maintained roads makes 60 per
cent of the country inaccessible by road during the rainy season.
Insecurity and bad roads means it is difficult to truck food into Wau
or to get that food from the town to the rural areas.

“Cereal production last year was at its lowest level since the
conflict started. Food prices are inflated due to lack of
availability. There is an economic crisis with the collapse of the
South Sudanese Pound so people can’t buy food. And they can’t go into
the fields without being killed,” said  Kämpf. “People are eating
leaves, wild berries and grass.”

More than 1.8 million people have left South Sudan altogether,
sparking the world’s fastest-growing refugee crisis.

The conflict in South Sudan continues to fragment with greater
unpredictability. Prospects for peace remains bleak despite renewed
international mediation efforts. Pope Francis cancelled a trip to
South Sudan as progress from the civil war’s protagonists remains
deadlocked.

“The people of South Soudan just want peace. We want this war to end,”
said Fr Peter.

http://www.caritas.org/2017/06/church-provides-aid-
starvation-grips-south-sudan/

END
______________________
John Ashworth

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