Chattanooga Times Free Press

South Sudanese flee war in Sudan

- BY ABDI LATIF DAHIR

JODA, South Sudan — Nyamut Gai lost everything four years ago when armed militias stormed through her village in South Sudan, a landlocked African country tormented by civil war, famine and flooding.

Desperate, she and her family fled almost 600 miles north across the border to Sudan, where she worked as a cleaner in the capital, Khartoum, and began to settle in. But then, a fierce war broke out in Sudan in mid-April between rival factions of the military, sending her packing yet again.

As she and her family made the weekslong journey by foot and bus from Khartoum, her 1-monthold son began coughing and withering away from hunger, and soon died. When she finally crossed the border into South Sudan, any sense of relief she felt was shattered when her 3-year-old son succumbed to measles.

“We are not safe anywhere,” Gai, 28, said on a recent morning at a muddy and congested aid center in Renk, a town in South Sudan.

“People fled war here. There’s a war in Sudan now. There’s war everywhere,” she said. “It never ends.”

The war in Sudan has set off a mass exodus of people who years ago fled a bloody civil war in South Sudan to seek safety in Sudan. But they are returning home to a country still in the grip of political instabilit­y, economic stagnation and a massive humanitari­an crisis — many of them without actual homes to return to.

Sudan descended into chaos almost five months ago, when a longsimmer­ing rivalry between the leader of the army, Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan, and the commander of the paramilita­ry Rapid Support Forces, Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, burst into open warfare across the northeast African nation.

In recent weeks, the conflict has intensifie­d in Khartoum and adjoining cities, and also in the Darfur region of western Sudan, where mass graves have been uncovered. Regional and internatio­nal efforts to end the fighting have hit a stalemate, with Burhan dismissing any attempts at mediation last month before his first postwar foreign trip to Egypt.

On Wednesday, the United States imposed sanctions on senior leaders in the paramilita­ry force, including Dagalo’s brother, Abdelrahim Hamdan Dagalo.

The vicious fighting has precipitat­ed a staggering humanitari­an crisis that has left millions in Sudan, a nation of 46 million, facing shortages of food, water, medicine and electricit­y. Thousands of people have been killed and injured in the conflict, the United Nations, Sudanese officials and aid agencies estimate.

The war in Sudan has displaced more than 5.2 million people, according to the U.N. refugee agency, with more than 1 million of them flooding into neighborin­g countries already facing their own economic and political challenges.

One of those countries is South Sudan, which has received more than 250,000 people to date. A country of 11 million, it became the world’s newest nation when it gained independen­ce from Sudan in 2011, but soon after was torn apart by a civil war set off by a power struggle between the country’s political leaders.

Intercommu­nal violence, chronic food shortages and devastatin­g floods continue to afflict the country — and many South Sudanese are now fleeing the war in Sudan only to begin a new ordeal in their homeland.

“They are coming to start from zero,” Albino Akol Atak, the South Sudanese minister for humanitari­an affairs and disaster management, said in an interview in the capital, Juba.

At the Joda border crossing between the two nations, almost 2,000 people, most of them South Sudanese, plod through every day after sunrise. Many arrive after weeks of walking or driving through territory teeming with robbers and paramilita­ry forces who they said took their phones and food, sexually assaulted the women and beat the men.

After being processed and given high-energy bars, the new arrivals are crammed into buses that transport them to a transit center nearly 40 miles away in Renk. Designed to hold 3,000 people, the center is now packed with twice as many.

During a recent visit, people were crowded into a muddy field with limited access to showers or toilets. Some families fashioned makeshift shelters from plastic tarpaulins or bedsheets. Others sat in the open, braving the 100-degree Fahrenheit temperatur­es during the day and deluges of rain at night.

As the afternoon sun blazed, the air filled with the wailing of sick and hungry children.

“They blew our lives up,” Muawiya Salah Yusuf, a 29-year-old Sudanese said of the warring generals as he cuddled his 2-year-old son, Yasir, and begged him to stop crying.

Yusuf, who has a degree in electrical engineerin­g, had for years struggled to find a job. But he was finally able to open a shop selling and repairing phones in Omdurman, a city near Khartoum. Now, all that was lost, he said, and he found himself sharing a small tent in Renk with 10 family members.

“I feel like we are living in an alternate reality,” he said, musing about how long he would be marooned in the squalid purgatory of the camp with his sick child and his wife, who was seven months pregnant.

“I feel so hopeless I can’t even think of tomorrow,” he said.

Several miles away, hundreds of Sudanese and South Sudanese streamed into the Renk County Hospital every day, medical officials said, burdening a facility with limited staff and shortages of water, electricit­y and medical supplies.

In the children’s intensive care unit, malnourish­ed babies lay nearly lifeless as intravenou­s fluids dripped into their veins. In the surgical section, men nursed bullet wounds that they said had been inflicted by Sudan’s paramilita­ry forces. Almost all those interviewe­d said they had relatives and friends in Sudan who had been killed or who had disappeare­d weeks or months ago.

Funding for the crisis hasn’t kept up with the growing needs, even as the United Nations and humanitari­an agencies grapple with a shortage of staff and dwindling food and medical supplies. Donor nations — focused on Ukraine, their own economic challenges and other competing crises in Africa and beyond — have pledged only 20% of the $1 billion needed to support those fleeing the violence this year.

 ?? JOAO SILVA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Refugees who have fled the fighting in Sudan are shown Aug. 26 at a processing center in Renk, South Sudan.
JOAO SILVA/THE NEW YORK TIMES Refugees who have fled the fighting in Sudan are shown Aug. 26 at a processing center in Renk, South Sudan.

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