MSF forced to suspend work in part of South Sudan

Date Published: 30/07/2010 04:41

MSF calls for respect of medical activities and facilities as it is forced to suspend medical aid in health centre. All other MSF facilities in Jonglei and Sudan continue.

Following three separate security incidents in one of its remote healthcare clinics, international emergency medical aid organisation, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been forced to suspend all activities in Gumuruk, Jonglei State, Southern Sudan.

MSF is calling on all armed groups, community members and political parties in Southern Sudan to respect the neutrality of MSF medical staff, activities and facilities, so that life-saving aid can be urgently delivered to people in need.

Attacks on our staff and clinics prevent us from providing essential medical aid. These incidents are totally unacceptable as they stop us from treating patients and put our staff at risk,” said Rob Mulder, MSF head of mission in Southern Sudan.

In Jonglei State, MSF runs a healthcare centre in Pibor town, and two smaller outreach clinics in more remote areas, Lekwongole and Gumuruk, which are only accessible by plane or boat during the current rainy season.

On 1st July an armed group entered Gumuruk clinic, stealing boxes of Plumpy Nut, a peanut-based food needed to treat severely malnourished children. Three days later, on 4th July, Plumpy Nut was again stolen, in addition to medical equipment. Then, on 27th July, while travelling by boat from Pibor to Gumuruk, four MSF staff members were violently robbed by armed men.

“Though we are fully committed to providing emergency medical aid to Gumuruk community, we have been left with no other choice than to suspend all medical activities in our outreach clinic,” added Mulder.

The Gumuruk outreach clinic serves a population of more than 30,000 people, providing basic medical care, including general consultations, treatment for malnutrition, ante-natal care and vaccinations. Complex medical cases requiring hospitalisation are referred to MSF’s bigger clinic in Pibor, from where serious cases in need of surgery are evacuated by MSF plane to hospitals in Boma, or in the capital, Juba.

More than 160 malnourished children were receiving treatment in our Gumuruk clinic. In addition, there were up to 20 severely malnourished children arriving each week. Unless the situation improves, it is impossible to evacuate those who need hospitalisation or surgery, including women with obstructed labour, children with cerebral malaria or severe anaemia who need blood transfusions,” said Gbane Mahama, MSF medical coordinator for Southern Sudan. 

Apart from a small Ministry of Health facility in Pibor town, MSF is the only primary healthcare provider in this part of Jonglei State, home to around 150,000 people, where villages are separated by large distances and roads are often impassable.


 

MSF has been working in Sudan since 1979 providing free-of-charge medical assistance to people suffering from the effects of poor access to healthcare, floods, droughts, disease outbreaks, armed conflict and nutritional emergencies.

MSF runs clinics and hospitals across ten Sudanese states, including Warrap, Jonglei, Upper Nile, Unity, Northern Bahr-el-Ghazal, Western Equatoria, Central Equatoria, the transitional area of Abyei, Red Sea, Al-Gedaref and North Darfur.

MSF is an independent and neutral emergency medical organisation that serves all people based on impartial assessments of need, regardless of race, political, tribal or religious affiliation.

MSF logo

4:27 AM, Fri Feb 10, 2012

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