South Sudan – Reporters Nepal https://nepalireporter.com Impart Educate Propel Thu, 21 Dec 2017 11:33:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.6 https://nepalireporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/cropped-RN_Logo-32x32.png South Sudan – Reporters Nepal https://nepalireporter.com 32 32 Civil war pushing South Sudan closer to starvation https://nepalireporter.com/2017/12/44294 https://nepalireporter.com/2017/12/44294#respond Thu, 21 Dec 2017 11:32:58 +0000 http://nepalireporter.com/?p=44294 SudanIt’s been almost 25 years since more than 1 million people were on the brink of starvation in southern Sudan, a crisis captured in a Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph of a vulture poised near a starving little girl. Today, people in what was known as the “famine triangle” say the situation has only deteriorated.]]> Sudan

JIECH, Dec 21: Writhing in agony on the dirt floor of his hut, Bob Wol traced the recent gunshot wounds on his thigh and back with his fingers.

“I was trying to get food and my government tried to kill me,” the 29-year-old told The Associated Press.

It’s been almost 25 years since more than 1 million people were on the brink of starvation in southern Sudan, a crisis captured in a Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph of a vulture poised near a starving little girl. Today, people in what was known as the “famine triangle” say the situation has only deteriorated.

“Before, only the hunger was killing you,” said Lony Toang, who survived the earlier famine in Ayod County. “Now it’s worse because we have hunger and we’re killing people.”

As South Sudan enters its fifth year of civil war, 1.25 million people are facing starvation, according to the latest analysis by the United Nations and the government. The U.N. warns that if fighting continues famine will spread to several places across the country by early next year and almost half the population of 11 million will be severely food insecure.

During a visit this month to Ayod County, the AP spoke with some who were already hungry.

In a desperate attempt to feed his wife and five small children, who hadn’t eaten in days, Wol went in search of help. After six days of walking, eating fruit picked from trees, he reached government-held Ayod town, where he said soldiers wary of rebels ambushed him.

“When I got shot I was just thinking that I didn’t want to die before I got food for my family,” Wol said, staring despondently at the floor. “We’re locked in here and we can’t get out.”

Ayod is one of two counties in South Sudan currently in catastrophe, with 8,000 people experiencing extreme hunger. During a visit to Ayod’s rebel-held headquarters in Jiech town, dozens of residents said that without food aid they would starve to death.

Remote, barren and sealed off from the rest of the nation, the county of roughly 160,000 people in Jonglei State has been devastated by fighting.

South Sudan’s army rejected people’s accounts of brutality as negative propaganda by the opposition, saying it is not government policy to prevent civilians from reaching aid.

“What sense does it make for the government forces to kill its own citizens looking for food?” said Col. Domic Chol Santo, the army’s acting spokesman.

Yet across South Sudan allegations are rife of both the government and the rebels using food as a weapon of war.

On a visit last month to the Equatoria region, the AP spoke with people in Yei and Lainya towns who said the army was arbitrarily detaining, raping and killing civilians trying to cultivate their fields, amid suspicions that they were part of the opposition.

Lainya resident Mary Yata said four government soldiers in September tried to steal cassava when she was tending her fields. “They said if I didn’t leave now they’d kill me,” she said. Days later she saw the soldiers selling her cassava at the market.

Advocacy groups are calling on the warring sides to stop holding South Sudan’s people hostage.

“The civilians are caught in a deadly circle and they’re certainly not being protected,” said Donatella Rovera, Amnesty International’s senior crisis response adviser.

With nowhere to go, Ayod residents said they will continue relying on handouts by the U.N.’s World Food Program.

At a food distribution last week, the desperation was palpable as 11,000 malnourished people poured in from the surrounding bush. Some had walked overnight to receive bags of sorghum, beans and cooking oil.

Although the WFP has increased its distributions in Ayod from every 90 days to every 60 days, aid workers on the ground say the food is enough for just one month.

“I saw old people collecting grains that fell on the ground out of the bags,” said Ewnetu Yohannes, team leader for Catholic Relief Services, the organization overseeing the distribution. “If WFP wasn’t here it’d be a catastrophe.”

Wiping breast milk from the cheek of her 10-month-old daughter, Jiech resident Elizabeth Nyakoda blamed the hunger on the years of fighting.

Unable to register in time for the aid distribution and too scared to cultivate her fields, the 35-year-old mother of five has been begging her family for food.

She rubbed her hand over her daughter’s protruding rib cage as the baby began to wail. Shrugging her shoulders, Nyakoda looked away.

“When the child cries from hunger, what can I do for her?” she said. “There are no options.” AP

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Nepalese police unit awarded UN medal for service in South Sudan https://nepalireporter.com/2017/11/42641 https://nepalireporter.com/2017/11/42641#respond Thu, 16 Nov 2017 10:12:29 +0000 http://nepalireporter.com/?p=42641 The Nepalese Formed Police Unit has served and protected the people of South Sudan including the internally displaced who have sought refuge at the Protection of Civilians (PoC) sites next to UN bases in Juba and Bor.]]>

LIATILE PUTSOA, Nov 16: The Nepalese formed police unit has been awarded with United Nation medal for service in South Sudan.

The Head of the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS), David Shearer, in awarding the medals, praised the contingent of 320 Nepali police officers – 180 based in the capital Juba and 140 based in Bor, in the Jonglei region, for “their commendable contribution to the Mission’s core mandate which is to protect civilians and to build durable peace in South Sudan.”

The UNMISS chief urged the peacekeepers to “wear the medals as proud and worthy ambassadors of Nepal and the United Nations.”  The contingent is preparing to return to Nepal in February 2018, after a year-long deployment working in difficult and stressful conditions away from family and friends.

Of the 320-strong Nepalese police force, 27 are women.

“The more women we have, particularly in these roles, the better we are able to communicate and work with the people of South Sudan,” said David Shearer. “Many of the people who are most affected are women and children and they respond very well, particularly to women police.”

The Nepalese Formed Police Unit has served and protected the people of South Sudan including the internally displaced who have sought refuge at the Protection of Civilians (PoC) sites next to UN bases in Juba and Bor.

David Shearer recognized the wide range of activities the unit has been involved in, which include public order management, supporting humanitarian efforts, and engagement in patrols in and around Juba city to ensure the safety and security of civilians. They have also provided security to VIP visitors, with the most recent and notable visit from the United States Ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley.

Speaking at the ceremony, UNMISS Police Commissioner, Bruce Munyambo, applauded the “dedicated, disciplined and loyal” FPU members who risked their lives to protect civilians, paying special tribute to those who sustained physical injury during the crisis in July 2016.

“Even in lesser numbers, you stood firm to protect others,” he said.

Nepal is the sixth largest Troop Contributing Country with over 5,100 uniformed personnel currently deployed in UN peacekeeping missions across the world. Nearly 2,000 currently serve in South Sudan.

The first group of Nepalese peacekeepers arrived in the conflict-affected country in January 2014 shortly after the outbreak of civil war in December 2013.

Since becoming a member of the United Nations in 1955, more than 100,000 Nepalese have served in peacekeeping missions around the world.

(This article is contributed by UNMISS.) Photos: UNMISS

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