Cape Times

‘They thought the camera was a gun’

- Bergman is MSF field communicat­ions manager in Mozambique and Tadeu Andre is MSF digital multimedia producer for Southern Africa.

IN APRIL, following the horrific attacks in the city of Palma in Mozambique, Amanda Bergman and Tadeu Andre travelled to Cabo Delgado province to document the unfolding humanitari­an situation.

Here they reflect on their experience­s.

Mozambique is home to incredible natural beauty.

As you travel from Pemba, capital of the northern province of Cabo Delgado, to Montepuez, its second largest city, you see countless baobab trees and the most beautiful birds, such as Zanzibar red bishops and Bertram’s weavers, flying across the landscape.

You also see many people walking alongside the road, carrying small colourful bundles containing their belongings.

Many of them ask for lifts, money or food, telling you they are hungry because they haven’t eaten in days.

In addition to being the poorest province in one of the poorest countries in the world, Cabo Delgado has been ravaged by conflict since 2017.

Hundreds of thousands of people have been displaced and are in dire need of humanitari­an assistance.

MSF has been working in Cabo

Delgado since 2019 and, as members of MSF’s communicat­ions department, part of our job is to document MSF’s activities in the country.

On our way to Montepuez, we saw a new resettleme­nt camp was being set up.

We stopped the car and, within minutes, a woman approached us. She said: “You need to help us, we are hungry.”

She and her son were sitting at the side of the road, their belongings piled up next to them, hoping for transport to take them to Pemba.

They fled their village because of the violence and were in search of a place to settle, somewhere they could start over again.

Like thousands of others, they were in search of safety but unsure of where they would find it or how long that safety would last.

In Montepuez, MSF teams are providing mental health support and health promotion activities for the displaced people and the communitie­s that host them.

Our community health workers go from door to door to explain who MSF is, what we are doing and the type of care they can get.

The teams talk through the signs and symptoms of conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder and other common mental health problems.

Mental health is something that isn’t often discussed in these communitie­s.

Many of the people our teams speak to ask for headache tablets and medication­s for other ailments, not realising they are experienci­ng the physical manifestat­ions of the trauma they have been through.

We knew from our field teams that in many villages, there were multi-generation­al families of up to 30 people, living together under one roof after displaced families came looking for their relatives and a place to stay.

Overcrowdi­ng and a lack of food, clean water, sanitation and health services are a recipe for disaster and disease outbreaks, therefore it is important for MSF to reach these families.

As we made our way through the green pastures outside the city, we came across two groups of children having classes under the shade of mushroom-shaped trees that provided them with some much-needed relief from the heat of the sun.

When the first group saw us, they waved and giggled, probably unused to seeing foreigners walking through their community.

However, the reaction of the second group of children was a bit different.

They ran away, scattering into the bush and hiding behind trees.

We didn’t think anything of it until their teacher approached us and explained this was a class of mainly displaced children and, when they saw Tadeu with a camera in hand, they thought it was a gun.

We were shocked: to see children react to a camera – something that normally sparks curiosity and playfulnes­s – as though it were a tool of destructio­n shows the effects of conflict on a person’s mind.

We apologised for disrupting the class and immediatel­y put away the camera. It’s heartbreak­ing to witness the psychologi­cal effects this conflict has on people.

Mental health support is a priority for MSF and our teams conduct daily activities with women, men and children affected by the violence.

Most have lived through unimaginab­le and painful situations and are now trying to move on with their lives, but the scars of emotional trauma are not so easily healed.

Those who can’t easily voice their sorrows show them in other ways.

One of the activities MSF does with children is to give them building blocks to help them to express themselves.

Very often, with these blocks they build guns.

With no end in sight, the conflict will continue to displace and traumatise those who experience the violence first-hand.

For those who have escaped, the journey of rebuilding their lives has just begun and it is one filled with uncertaint­y. Will this new life be a permanent home? A temporary shelter? No one can be sure.

Our colleagues will continue to provide support to as many people as they can, and we look forward to the day when children no longer confuse cameras with guns.

• To support MSF’s work:

SMS “JOIN” to 42110 to donate R30 Once-off

Visit https://www.msf.org.za/ donate

 ?? AMANDA BERGMAN ?? THE conflict in the northern Mozambique province of Cabo Delgado, which started in 2017, has now forced nearly 670 000 people from their homes. Living conditions in the IDP camps, set up to accommodat­e displaced families, feel increasing­ly inadequate. |
AMANDA BERGMAN THE conflict in the northern Mozambique province of Cabo Delgado, which started in 2017, has now forced nearly 670 000 people from their homes. Living conditions in the IDP camps, set up to accommodat­e displaced families, feel increasing­ly inadequate. |
 ??  ?? MSF mental health activities include conversati­on circles, theatre, football matches, dancing and singing. “We try to understand what their lives were like before they escaped,” says a member of the mental health team.
MSF mental health activities include conversati­on circles, theatre, football matches, dancing and singing. “We try to understand what their lives were like before they escaped,” says a member of the mental health team.

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