Photo: Hannah McNeish/IRIN. Yida refugees wait for soap and salt
Source: IRIN
MABAN COUNTY, 21 September 2012 (IRIN) - Aid agencies say water and food
provision has improved in four camps housing more than 105,000 refugees
from Sudan's Blue Nile State, but flooding, disease and an influx of
additional refugees pose new threats.
Two new camps have been set up in South Sudan's Upper Nile State to ease
the strain on facilities in Jammam camp, which is suffering myriad
health problems associated with recent floods.
"The conditions here in Gendrassa [camp] are okay, [though] there is
still a lot of malaria. In Jammam, there is still a lot of diarrhoea.
Here, we have some control over it," said Sheikh Abdel-Aziz Fadul, a
refugee.
Stanlake Samkange, East and Central Africa director for the UN World
Food Programme (WFP), expects more inflows into the camps as routes
currently blocked by floods dry up.
"We are certainly planning for up to 30,000 more people coming in 2012.
But there are many more people on the other side of the border than
that," he told IRIN.
Influx
"My biggest concern is that if this number increases significantly, then
it will put additional pressure on our efforts," he added.
Sudan's government forces and rebels have been fighting in Blue Nile State since September 2011, sending refugees south.
The number of incoming refugees tapered when rains, starting in April,
began to cut off access to the camps. George Okoth-Obbo, Africa director
for the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), thinks the number of refugees in
camps in Upper Nile's Maban County and neighbouring Unity State, which
currently have more than 60,000 refugees from Sudan's South Kordofan
State, could soon swell again.
"When we were up in Maban and talking to the refugees, all of them were
telling us this or confirming it… saying 'at least half my family is
[still] in Blue Nile' and so on," he added.
Having planned, before the rains, for a maximum of 100,000 people in
Upper Nile and Unity, the UN has had to dig into backup funds to fly in
goods for shelter, cooking and sanitation for 170,000 people, while WFP
is resorting to costly food airdrops.
"We cannot risk having gaps, and the airdrops are to fill the gaps," said Samkange.
Meanwhile, efforts to lift Sudan's block on aid to people stuck in South
Kordofan and Blue Nile have yet to bear fruit. "The government in
Khartoum agreed in principle that humanitarian access should be provided
but we are still negotiating...about the terms," he said.
Disease
Pilar Bauza, UNHCR’s emergency health coordinator, says refugees have
suffered respiratory and diarrheal diseases, malaria and malnutrition
from poor living conditions and nutrition.
"These people were walking for about a month. They were in Blue Nile
with no proper health system, and then they got even more vulnerable
along the way," she said.
While aid agencies say they have been vigilant about addressing
potential cholera outbreaks, the Jamam, Yusif Batil and Gendrassa camps
in Upper Nile have been hit by an outbreak of hepatitis E. The disease
results from consuming contaminated water.
"To date, a total of 384 suspected and confirmed hepatitis E cases and
16 deaths have been reported from the three refugee camps," since July,
said a 13 September statement by the Ministry of Health.
Health education campaigns, an increase in water provision from 10 to 13
litres per day, and a drop in malnutrition from 40 to 33 percent have
improved the health of the refugees, but more needs to be done.
"We are not out of the woods yet - this is not mission accomplished,"
UNHCR's Okoth-Obbo said. "There is still a lot ahead of us in terms of
the condition of the people. We still have an unacceptably high level of
morbidity. We need to bring down mortality."
Running out of money
Another key aim is to improve roads, which, after recent flooding, once
again cut off access between Yusif Batil and Gendrassa camps.
But to continue providing basic services by the end of the year, UNHCR
says it urgently requires US$20 million, having only received 40 percent
of its $183 million appeal to manage humanitarian needs in the camps.
WFP says it has only received about a third of the $6 million it needs
to airdrop food to the current caseload until the end of the year.
Security
Compounding these issues is security.
UNHCR has long tried to move people away from Yida camp, considered too
close to the border. "We did not think the location of Yida was viable -
so close to the border, so close to the violence," Okoth-Obbo said.
Aid agencies also fear that armed groups are operating and recruiting
refugees within camps in Upper Nile, as another deadline for Sudan and
South Sudan to find a deal on the largely undefined border approaches.
"You can hear the shots come from over there, over there, over there and
over there," said Sheikh Abdel-Aziz Fadul, a refugee, pointing to a sea
of tents in each direction.