Share this on:
 E-mail
19
VIEWS
 
RECOMMENDS
0
SHARES
About this iReport
  • Not vetted for CNN

  • Click to view MSFSAfrica's profile
    Posted February 15, 2013 by
    MSFSAfrica
    Location
    Johannesburg, South Africa

    More from MSFSAfrica

    South Sudan: MSF treats wounded after attack on civilians in Akobo county, Jonglei state

     
    14 February, 2013, Juba. Following an attack in Akobo county in northern Jonglei state on Friday 8 February, international medical humanitarian organisation Médecins Sans Frontières is treating 13 patients in two health facilities in neighbouring Upper Nile state; all except one of them suffering from gun shot wounds. The majority of patients are women and children, including a 34 year old pregnant woman and a three year old child, both with gun shot wounds.

    “Our patients tell us they were migrating from their village in Walgak toward the Sobat River with their cattle when they were attacked”, says Michiel van Tongeren, MSF Project Coordinator in Nasir. “They say the attackers were armed with guns and many people were killed. They report that it was mostly women and children as the men were faster to escape. Some people returned to bury the dead and help the wounded, but then they became scared and fled again.”

    An MSF team currently in Ulang – the area to which a large number of people fled following the attack – is identifying wounded people in the area and stabilising patients in a healthcare facility. Once stable, patients are transported by boat to the organisation’s hospital in Nasir. MSF’s surgical team in Nasir has operated on 12 patients since Monday 11 February and is continuing to operate on more patients as needed. All patients are currently in a stable condition.

    “Right now, it is not clear just how many more wounded people are hiding in the bush who have not yet been able to access medical care”, says van Tongeren. “We are trying to find them and refer them to our hospital in Nasir for treatment. We will start carrying out mobile clinics to identify more wounded and provide medical care for this vulnerable population who survived the attack.”

    MSF has repeatedly sounded the alarm on the high levels of violence affecting the population in Jonglei, a state where access to healthcare is already tremendously difficult. In November 2012, the organisation issued a report documenting the devastating impact of extreme violence on the lives and health of civilians in the state.

    “It is not only the direct consequences of violence, such as gun shot wounds, that we are concerned about”, says Raphael Gorgeu, MSF Head of Mission in South Sudan. “Our experience working in Jonglei shows that there are less visible, but equally serious indirect consequences. Entire communities have to flee for their lives deep into the bush. Without shelter, food or safe drinking water, they are susceptible to malaria, pneumonia, malnutrition and diarrhoea.”

    MSF has been working in Jonglei state since 1993. MSF provides primary and secondary healthcare through its health centres in Pibor, Uror and Nyirol counties, as well as emergency medical care when required in response to outbreaks of extreme violence. Patients in need of surgery are referred to MSF health facilities in Nasir (Upper Nile) and Leer (Unity), and in some cases, to Boma hospital and to Juba teaching hospital. In November 2012, MSF published the report ‘South Sudan’s hidden crisis: how violence against civilians is devastating communities and preventing access to life saving healthcare in Jonglei’.

    For more information contact:
    Kate Ribet – Media Liaison Officer – kate.ribet@joburg.msf.org – mobile: +27 (0) 79 87 229 5


    Follow MSF SA on Twitter (www.twitter.com/MSF_southafrica) and Facebook (www.facebook.com/MSFsouthafrica).

    For more about the Médecins Sans Frontières South Africa, refer to www.msf.org.za.

    * Photo credit: Brendan Bannon

    What do you think of this story?

    Select one of the options below. Your feedback will help tell CNN producers what to do with this iReport. If you'd like, you can explain your choice in the comments below.
    Be and editor! Choose an option below:
      Awesome! Put this on TV! Almost! Needs work. This submission violates iReport's community guidelines.

    Comments

    Log in to comment

    iReport welcomes a lively discussion, so comments on iReports are not pre-screened before they post. See the iReport community guidelines for details about content that is not welcome on iReport.

    Add your Story Add your Story