| JUBA, South Sudan
JUBA, South Sudan Solomon was just seven years old when he woke up missing a leg. And he was one of the lucky ones. For weeks later, Solomon was back on two feet with the aid of an artificial leg, fitted at a hectic hospital cum limb-making factory in the South Sudanese capital of Juba.The hospital is in horribly high demand in a country born of war that remains littered with mines and explosive devices, with civil war still raging all around. Most of South Sudan’s approximately 60,000 amputees have suffered war-related injuries, be it gunshot or landmine wounds.As civil war devastates the world’s youngest country - it celebrates its sixth anniversary next month - it has become increasingly difficult for amputees to gain good treatment. SECOND CHANCE Solomon came to his first artificial limb after an open fracture turned into a life-threatening infection, which forced doctors to amputate. When he woke from surgery in a remote hospital in South Sudan’s Bentiu, he was far away from the capital with little chance of rehabilitation or help adjusting to his new life. ”I was put on a flight to Juba, where I am receiving a new, artificial leg,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation from his current home at the Physical Rehabilitation Reference Centre.It is the country’s biggest hospital for prosthetic orthotic treatment, treating about 30 patients a day.“Amputations have gone up since the beginning of the civil war in 2013, but even with increased need, access to some areas is impossible due to active fighting and many people who have lost limbs might never be able to get out and receive help,” said Emmanuel Lobari, who as head of technicians oversees the production of all the prosthetic limbs. Both hospital and factory, the center produces an average of 50 prostheses each month – all hand-made and custom fit.DURABLE, AFFORDABLE “We use polypropylene to make the limbs, a material that has proved to be both durable and affordable,” said physiotherapist Daniel Odhiambo. A Kenyan, he is one of a handful of expatriate staff at the hospital, employed by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). “The prostheses last for an average of two years and it’s usually the foot, made out of a softer material, that wears out the fastest. The leg itself can last up to ten years.” Making a limb – from melting the plastic-like polypropylene to shaping it into a leg – is a quick process in the hospital’s small, modern factory and can all be done within a day. “It’s the fitting and the patient’s adaption that take up to ten days,” said Lobari. Lobari is South Sudanese, like most of the hospital’s 30 staff, all of whom received Red Cross training.The organization first started treating amputations in 1979 during Ethiopia’s civil war, and developed the polypropylene technology that has since spread across all conflict zones. Odhiambo has worked in many places, including Afghanistan, Yemen and Iraq. He recently took up his second mission in Juba.“Here in South Sudan, I mainly see war wounds and they are very different from civilian wounds,” he explained. Nearly 250,000 mines and explosive devices were found and destroyed in South Sudan in 2017 alone, according to the United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS). South Sudan slipped into civil war in 2013, just two years after becoming independent from Khartoum, and some 4 million people – one third of the population – have fled to neighboring countries in its wake. For those left behind, risk is part of daily life.The worst case Odhiambo has seen is an 18-year-old boy, who was brought to the clinic with both legs blown off by a landmine, pieces of muscle hanging out of the wound and shrapnel fragments stuck deep in his flesh.“He was in consistent pain and it took months to build the right prosthesis, but I stayed with him through the whole process. I told him not to give up. He had his whole life ahead of him still.” A RESILIENT NATION Simon has been coming to the hospital for several months and can still vividly recall the day he was attacked, when several bullets were shot through his leg. “I thought I was going to die, but my family took me to a small hospital where my leg was amputated,” he said. Simon is from the north of the country then moved to Juba to get better care.Three in four patients at the center are male. The women and children at the hospital underwent amputations after suffering a range of traumas, such as war injuries, crocodile bites, road accidents or infections.It helps patients such as Solomon - just starting a new life with his first prosthesis - to meet older patients like Simon.“The boy is still young, but he can see that he’s not alone with his injury,” said Odhiambo.“The one difference I’ve noted working in South Sudan is that people here accept their fate easier than any others. They are resilient and want to go on with their lives. I even see it in Solomon,” said Odhiambo. “People have suffered, but they don’t lose their drive and motivation.” (Reporting by Stefanie Glinski. Editing by Lyndsay Griffiths)
References
- ^ Stefanie Glinski (www.bing.com)
Newer articles:
- Changing The Lives Of Disabled People In South Sudan: The Real Impact Of The Humanitarian Disability Charter - 30/06/2017 06:58
- Crowded hospitals and mothers in need: A male midwife on delivering babies in South Sudan - 29/06/2017 15:04
- As South Sudan's civil war rages, cholera takes deadly toll - 29/06/2017 11:20
- South Sudan says aid workers can not go to 'insecure' rebel-held areas - 29/06/2017 10:01
- South Sudan pulls top envoys from 7 nations - 29/06/2017 00:26
Older news items
- Uganda's refugee intake dwarfs European countries as South Sudan crisis worsens - 28/06/2017 13:42
- South Sudan deports 3 US citizens who served in military - 28/06/2017 11:08
- South Sudan armed opposition rules out national dialogue participation - 28/06/2017 01:28
- South Sudan: Soldiers' Rape Trial Is a Publicity Stunt and Distraction - 27/06/2017 06:19
- In South Sudan, equipping young generation for young country's future - 26/06/2017 17:16
Latest news items (all categories):
- Violence in South Sudan is rising again: what’s different this time, and how to avoid civil war - 19/03/2025 13:47
- 50,000 residents displaced by violence in South Sudan - 19/03/2025 13:44
- International community offers to facilitate South Sudan peace talks - 19/03/2025 13:40
- Poor Advisor—Bad Decision—Scenario 56' - 19/03/2025 13:37
- مالك عقار: بين نضال الأمس وخيانة الشعب الجنوب سوداني - 19/03/2025 13:27
Random articles (all categories):
- South Sudan battles power outages - 17/09/2013 14:37
- U.N. Reports Hundreds Killed In Ethnic Violence In South Sudan - 21/04/2014 20:52
- South Sudan: The Dilemma of Peace and Accountability - 18/08/2014 11:20
- Clashes Sudan census, 120 dead - 26/04/2008 16:14
- Video produced by Southern Sudanese children to show on SSTV - 13/05/2010 21:20
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 82690 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 22503 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 21797 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 20010 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 19371 times