San Francisco Chronicle

Grief after losing loved ones adds to refugees’ strife

- By Rodney Muhumuza Rodney Muhumuza is an Associated Press writer.

BIDI BIDI, Uganda — The cemetery for South Sudanese refugees lies between two streams that flood when the rains come, leaving debris scattered across the otherwise unmarked graves.

That bothers James Malish, whose mother and sister recently died days apart. They were laid to rest here, along with about two dozen others on the edge of the world’s largest refugee settlement — and achingly far from home.

“Where we come from, we do not bury our dead people in the bush,” Malish said. “We bury our people in the compound, just in the front of the house.”

But the nearly one million refugees sheltering here in northern Uganda have to learn new ways of life, and death.

Malish, a father of six, witnessed killings in South Sudan’s civil war before fleeing last year. His brother was shot dead in the capital, Juba, allegedly by government soldiers, which sent shock waves through family members already living in Uganda.

His sister collapsed and died in Bidi Bidi in late April. A month later, his 78-year-old mother died after an accident that weakened her health.

Now the two lie next to each other in the isolated patch of land designated by Ugandan officials for graves. Malish has decided he can at least buy cement to make markers that won’t wash away.

The Bidi Bidi settlement has filled with people telling stories of violence and despair. Many hope to start afresh here. But some reach safety only to fall victim to meningitis, malaria and other tropical diseases.

When they die, their families face a dilemma: bury them without the traditiona­l customs, or carry them home and face war again.

And now Bidi Bidi is running out of accessible land. Uganda’s government has received global praise for the way it welcomes refugees, even giving them plots for cultivatio­n. But officials say they are overwhelme­d as South Sudan’s refugees pour in.

Over 950,000 refugees now shelter in northern Uganda, most of them in Bidi Bidi, with more than 1,000 arriving daily.

A total of 100 refugees died in two of Bidi Bidi’s five zonal areas between December and May, according to the aid group Internatio­nal Rescue Committee. It was not possible to get a death toll for the entire refugee settlement since August, when it opened.

Musa Ecweru, a Ugandan government minister in charge of refugees, said the government is working with local leaders to designate appropriat­e areas as cemeteries.

 ?? Ben Curtis / Associated Press ?? South Sudanese refugee James Malish, whose mother and sister recently died days apart, stands by the grave of his mother, Joyce Doru, this month near the camp in Bidi Bidi, Uganda.
Ben Curtis / Associated Press South Sudanese refugee James Malish, whose mother and sister recently died days apart, stands by the grave of his mother, Joyce Doru, this month near the camp in Bidi Bidi, Uganda.

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