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Five months of conflict in Sudan inflict heavy toll on children in camps

Over 1,200 Sudanese refugees under the age of five have died in nine camps between 15 May and 14 September, with most deaths linked to suspected measles and underlying malnutrition.
The Um Sangour camp in Kosti, in the country’s south, welcomes thousands of refugees.


The conflict in Sudan which has entered a fifth month has overwhelmed health facilities in the nation due to shortages of staff, lifesaving medicine and critical equipment.


“For 70,000 people in this camp we are expected to have seven prime health care facilities. We only have one at the moment. Therefore, additional funding is required to increase the number of required health facilities in this refugee camp. Not only in this refugee camp but the whole White Nile operation humanitarian relief project.”


As he speaks, countless women and children are queuing to see doctors.
The UN children’s agency spokesman said the institution received just a quarter of the $838 million (784 million euros) it had requested to help 10 million children in Sudan.


Health conditions in the country remain extremely dire with reports of high malnutrition, disease outbreaks and shortages of medicines, electricity and water which is an utmost concern on the ground.
“Lack of water will have a camp being exposed to risks and to diseases,” Anas Abo Khalaf, a Water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) officer working with the UNHCR said.


“The need of water to perform the minimum hygiene activities on a personal level on a household level cannot be ignored, cannot be avoided and is a must to be provided. If you want minimum the health risks that any community will be facing the first defence you should focus on is the hygiene and the personal hygiene.”


UNICEF alerted many thousands of newborns could die between now and the end of the year given the dire health care situation.


Over 5.3 million people have been newly displaced by the ongoing conflict including over one million forced to flee to neighbouring countries.


Malaria cases are also on the rise accounting for 40% of all medical consultations in Renk.
In Ethiopia, which is another neighbour to Sudan, a cholera outbreak was declared in the town of Metema. Sudanese, Eritrean and other refugees have been arriving from Sudan and have found refuge in Metema (north-west Ethiopia). As of 5 September, 435 cases including eight deaths were reported.


The Amhara Regional Health Bureau (RHB) is leading the cholera response the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said with UNHCR and the government’s Refugee and Returnee Service (RRS) part of the coordination/outbreak control team.


If the case fatality rate reduced from 2.3% to 1.8%, it remains high at double the standard of below 1%.

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