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South Sudan: Renewed fighting in Wau leaves people in dire need of help

29 Jun 2016
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Dr David Kahindi, Deputy Medical Coordinator for Médecins sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF), has been working in South Sudan for more than three years. He recently arrived in Wau where he has been overseeing MSF’s emergency response.
 
Just one week ago I drove past the empty land that surrounds the UN base in Wau, South Sudan. Now the same fields are flooded with thousands of people who have fled their homes in fear for their lives. We know that tens of thousands more people are scattered across the surrounding area. Some are sheltering in a school, in a church and others are totally exposed to the elements in the forest.

Dead bodies in the streets

On Friday last week, heavy fighting took place in Wau. We don’t yet know how many people were killed, but dead bodies are still lying in the streets. People started running and they still are – even when I am talking to you there are more people arriving at the UN base. They are mostly families with little belongings and urgently seek food, water, shelter and medical care.

The people we are treating are much sicker than we would have thought, but it is the culmination of months of ongoing instability. We’ve seen gunshot wounds, women who have been raped.

We’ve also seen people who just want to express what has happened to them. They are very distressed and have physical manifestations resulting of mental trauma. Today one man came to tell me that his brother had died in the fighting. He was trying to hide, but he was found and killed. He was asking us for help and it is clear that he is very depressed.

Mobile clinics in Wau

We’ve also treated people who fled the local hospital. Earlier this year patients were pulled from their hospital beds, so it’s not surprising that they don’t feel safe. Today I treated a lady who had severe burns on her hands and abdomen that had gone septic. She was too scared to get back to the hospital.
 
Whilst new waves of people have been forced from their homes in this round of fighting, others have been living outside for months, too scared to return home.

We’ve been here for a couple of months, running mobile clinics outside of the town trying to reach some of the most isolated people. Each week we treat cases of severe malaria - people are sleeping outside, under the trees, and don’t have access to bed nets.

We also see cases of severe malnutrition every week – people have not been able to cultivate their crops because of the conflict, so food is scarce. People also have upper respiratory tract infections, skin infections and diarrhoea – all of which are related to the conditions that they are forced to live in.
 
It is possible that there are hundreds if not thousands of people who have been pushed even further away by the fighting. It is those people that I am really worried about. If they are sick and can find treatment. We will work tirelessly to try and reach those people in the coming days.

Find out more about MSF's work in South Sudan