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Internally Displaced People

Hundreds of thousands face hardship and disease in overcrowded camps in White Nile State, Sudan

More than 140,000 people, mostly South Sudanese women and children fleeing from Khartoum, have newly arrived in White Nile state since conflict broke out in Sudan and are now facing huge unmet needs for food, shelter, healthcare and water and sanitation in 10 camps that host around 387,000 people, according to the local authorities. MSF teams working in some of these camps are overwhelmed with tens of new daily cases of suspected measles and malnutrition among children.

“Every day, more people arrive, and the numbers are increasing. In turn, this increases the need for improved health services, food and shelter,” says Ali Mohammed Dawoud, MSF medical activity manager.

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MSF doctors looking after children inside measles isolation unit at Um Sangour Refugees Camp, White Nile State.
Ahmad Mahmoud/MSF
The death toll was already high when we arrived. We received an average of 15 to 20 suspected measles cases daily, with six recorded deaths in the first week. Ali Mohammed Dawoud, MSF Medical Activity Manager.

In June, MSF teams started supporting three Ministry of Health (MoH) run clinics in providing primary healthcare in Um Sangour and Al Alagaya refugee camps, as well as in Khor Ajwal, which hosts the Sudanese population displaced from Blue Nile state. More recently, MSF has also started supporting the inpatient therapeutic feeding centre at the hospital in Al Kashafa refugee camp, where there are about 50 severely acutely malnourished children admitted, some of whom are referred from other refugee camps.

Um Sangour, a camp meant to host about 30,000 people, now houses over 70,000. The needs are huge and growing in the overcrowded camps. “The most common illnesses impacting the community here, especially children under the age of five, are suspected measles, pneumonia, and malnutrition,” says Ali.

“The death toll was already high when we arrived. We received an average of 15 to 20 suspected measles cases daily, with six recorded deaths in the first week. Tragically, most of these were children under the age of five. We partnered with the Ministry of Health, who provided us with resources to set up an isolation centre to provide these children with the necessary care.”

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“Today we conduct an average of 300 to 350 consultations daily, including 30 to 40 cases of suspected measles,” Ali continues. “We also have a delivery room for pregnant women and assist one to two births per day and conduct about 20 to 30 follow-ups (antenatal care services) for pregnant women. Our routine immunisation services include 30 to 40 children per day.”  

For several weeks MSF has been advocating with the local health authorities to mobilise available measles vaccines, already in the country, to carry out a mass vaccination of children across the White Nile. At the same time, in order to scale up medical and relief activities, we need a significant increase in staff, including additional international specialists, as the teams working on the ground are already overstretched and exhausted. The current conflict has left Sudan without the lab capacity to identify disease outbreaks. Across the border in Renk and Malakal, South Sudan, a measles outbreak has been confirmed among people who fled the conflict. Over 100,000 people are estimated to have already crossed the border from Sudan to South Sudan.   

Among the measles patients that MSF treats and screens in Malakal, over 90 per cent are unvaccinated, indicating that there has also been a disruption in routine vaccination programmes in Sudan. 

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Sangour and Ajwal: Critical unmet needs among displaced people in White Nile State.
Ahmad Mahmoud/MSF
There was intense bombing in our neighbourhood. My family of eight and I fled Khartoum two months ago. Hamida*, a patient at the clinic

“My niece is suffering from fever and diarrhoea, and she's also vomiting,” says Philip*, a young man waiting with his sister and her daughter at one of the clinics in White Nile state. “Although she was prescribed medication, we couldn't find it at the pharmacy. Unfortunately, there's a severe shortage of medication here. Measles—it's taking lives swiftly. The fever is proving lethal. If someone falls sick in the morning, they often don't survive until the evening.” 

Elsewhere at the clinic, a pregnant woman, Hamida*, waiting with her sick child, describes the other challenges people face. 

“There was intense bombing in our neighbourhood. My family of eight and I fled Khartoum two months ago. Here, our situation is challenging because we're new arrivals, and we haven't received any assistance. We've struggled to secure food. So far, we've only received plastic sheets. Numerous people are waiting for food and shelter materials; there is no space for shelters. The conditions are incredibly difficult; many people are living outdoors because they lack proper shelter. The water here is unclean, leading to sickness among the residents. If you drink the water, you’ll have diarrhoea and start to vomit.”

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The annual rains have already started, which may lead to a rise in waterborne diseases such as cholera and malaria, which is endemic to the area. In the overcrowded camps, people have few options to provide for themselves or their families, relying on assistance. Some have been supported with food from refugees and relatives living in the camps before the escalation of conflict. 

As more people arrive, there is an urgent need to scale up assistance, including nutritional support and provision of shelter, food, clean water, sanitation and measles vaccinations to curb an outbreak. This urgently requires more staff, including staff experienced in managing such crises and emergencies and securing shorter supply routes directly to the White Nile state from abroad. 

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Sangour and Ajwal: Critical unmet needs among displaced people in White Nile State.  
Ahmad Mahmoud/MSF

In just over three months of intense fighting in Sudan, more than 3 million people have been forced to leave their homes to save themselves and their families from conflict (UNOCHA). More than 2,1 million have been displaced by conflict, seeking refuge within Sudan. According to the International Organization for Migration, some of the highest numbers of displaced people are sheltering in White Nile state along with West Darfur, River Nile and the Northern states.

Dr. Papi Maloba, MSF surgeon

“Suddenly the calls started: ‘Come on, come on, there are patients arriving from everywhere!’

“I explained to my colleagues that we couldn't leave this patient with an open abdomen. In the operation room, everything was calm, but outside there was a great deal of commotion.

There were vehicles from the joint Chad-Sudan military force bringing in patients; MSF teams bringing in patients; others arriving on donkey carts or carried by relatives. We didn't know where to start. The injuries were serious: to the abdomen, chest, lower limbs, buttocks, and back. Our job was to triage the most serious injuries, examine them, and prioritize them for surgery.

“And in the blink of an eye, the hospital was transformed into a veritable camp in less than two hours. We didn't know where to put the patients who were still pouring in. We knew that if the road to El Geneina opened up—if there were successful negotiations to open up a corridor that would let patients from El Geneina through—more people would be arriving at Adré hospital. We were prepared, but we weren't expecting so many wounded patients all at once. We thought that the next day would be a bit calmer, that it would allow us to plan things properly. It turned out to be worse: The next day we received close to 400 new casualties."

“Suddenly the calls started: ‘Come on, come on, there are patients arriving from everywhere!’

“I explained to my colleagues that we couldn't leave this patient with an open abdomen. In the operation room, everything was calm, but outside there was a great deal of commotion.

There were vehicles from the joint Chad-Sudan military force bringing in patients; MSF teams bringing in patients; others arriving on donkey carts or carried by relatives. We didn't know where to start. The injuries were serious: to the abdomen, chest, lower limbs, buttocks, and back. Our job was to triage the most serious injuries, examine them, and prioritize them for surgery.

“And in the blink of an eye, the hospital was transformed into a veritable camp in less than two hours. We didn't know where to put the patients who were still pouring in. We knew that if the road to El Geneina opened up—if there were successful negotiations to open up a corridor that would let patients from El Geneina through—more people would be arriving at Adré hospital. We were prepared, but we weren't expecting so many wounded patients all at once. We thought that the next day would be a bit calmer, that it would allow us to plan things properly. It turned out to be worse: The next day we received close to 400 new casualties."

Stories from the massive influx of wounded Sudanese in eastern Chad

“Suddenly the calls started: ‘Come on, come on, there are patients arriving from everywhere!’

“I explained to my colleagues that we couldn't leave this patient with an open abdomen. In the operation room, everything was calm, but outside there was a great deal of commotion.

There were vehicles from the joint Chad-Sudan military force bringing in patients; MSF teams bringing in patients; others arriving on donkey carts or carried by relatives. We didn't know where to start. The injuries were serious: to the abdomen, chest, lower limbs, buttocks, and back. Our job was to triage the most serious injuries, examine them, and prioritize them for surgery.

“And in the blink of an eye, the hospital was transformed into a veritable camp in less than two hours. We didn't know where to put the patients who were still pouring in. We knew that if the road to El Geneina opened up—if there were successful negotiations to open up a corridor that would let patients from El Geneina through—more people would be arriving at Adré hospital. We were prepared, but we weren't expecting so many wounded patients all at once. We thought that the next day would be a bit calmer, that it would allow us to plan things properly. It turned out to be worse: The next day we received close to 400 new casualties