Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Violence, disease in South Sudan

- JOSPHAT KASIRE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bodies stuffed in wells. Houses burned down. Children playing on military hardware. And infants showing the skeletal outlines of severe hunger.

These are the scenes from a remote part of South Sudan — Leer — where Doctors Without Borders has just begun feeding severely malnourish­ed children about three months after the aid group’s hospital was destroyed in violence that has been ripping apart the country since December.

UN Secretary- General Ban Ki-moon told the Security Council on Monday that he visited South Sudan this month to “sound the alarm about the violence and the risk of catastroph­ic famine.” Ban warned that if the fighting continues, half of South Sudan’s 12 million people will be displaced, starving or dead by year’s end.

Government troops led by President Salva Kiir and rebel forces loyal to former Vice-President Riek Machar battled each other on Sunday, only two days after Kiir and Machar met in Ethiopia to sign a cease-fire deal, the second peace treaty of the conflict. The first one fell apart soon after it was signed.

More than 1.3 million people have fled their homes because of the violence. Many have spent months living in what people in this part of the world refer to as “the bush,” the untamed wild where dirty water and disease lie in wait.

People who fled Leer, a town of 20,000, are just starting to return to their homes, many of which are burned out or looted. Seasonal rains are starting to pour down, leaving families without a roof to cram in with neighbours or rough it in the rain.

“To be living in a place where you don’t even have a roof is awful,” said Sarah Maynard, a Doctors Without Borders project co-ordinator. “With the rains coming it will only get worse. People need help here.”

Doctors Without Borders reopened its clinic doors last Thursday to a flood of residents seeking help for malaria, measles, diarrhea, respirator­y tract infections — and hunger. The group screened 600 children and found 50 faced the most dire level of malnutriti­on.

Violence has upturned the rhythm of daily life. Residents showed a reporter how garbage and corpses fill one of Leer’s communal wells.

Myabani Nhial, a mother of 10, traded food staples like sorghum before the fighting broke out. Although her home and grain store has been reduced to a burnt-out shell, she keeps returning in the hope of finding something that might have escaped the loots and their fires.

“This was my home,” says Nhial. “It was burned by the soldiers. They killed three of my children … they have taken away everything.”

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