MABAN COUNTY, South Sudan, November 8 (UNHCR) - Aneim has just reached South Sudan's newest refugee camp, Gendrassa, after fleeing a devastating mid-October air attack on his village across the border in Sudan's Blue Nile state.
For UNHCR, the arrival of the livestock farmer and his extended family of 11 people was a further sign that floodwaters are receding and people are once again making the journey to safety in South Sudan's Upper Nile state following attacks on their villages. The refugee agency is, accordingly, taking preemptive measures to cope with a likely accelerated influx.
In the last week of October, UNHCR staff registered 72 new arrivals in Gendrassa, mostly women and children. Although small, this was the highest weekly arrival figure since the rainy season began in May and indicated that the numbers were starting to rise with the changing weather pattern. Before, the flooding was simply too deep to cross, but the most desperate are now chancing their luck as the waters start falling.
Mireille Girard, UNHCR's representative in South Sudan, said that many more refugees were likely to cross the border if fighting between the Sudanese armed forces and the Sudan People's Liberation Army-North escalated during the coming dry season, which begins in mid-November. Food shortages would also be a push factor.
She said that UNHCR had started preparing a contingency plan to meet the most pressing needs of up to 30,000 new refugee arrivals in Maban County between now and the end of the year. It covers key areas such as shelter, health care, food rations and non-food items such as plastic sheeting, blankets, sleeping mats, hygiene sets and kitchen items.
UNHCR currently works in four refugee camps in Upper Nile state's Maban County, including Gendrassa, which hosts some 14,300 refugees and is the only one that has not yet reached full capacity. It has room for another 5,000 refugees. Girard said the refugee agency was in negotiations with the local authorities to open new transit centres and camps in other counties.
The only potential new camp site under consideration in Maban County is located at a 400-hectare site and could host between 20,000 and 30,000 refugees. Other locations under consideration, all outside Maban, are Melut, Beneshowa and Longichok.
Unlike the other camps in Maban, the proposed new site sits on a base of pebbles, soil and clay, which makes it easier to instal drainage systems for washing areas and latrines. It is also in an area of shrubs, grassland and trees that can be used for construction and firewood, but this needs to be carefully managed to avoid friction with host communities and to protect natural resources and the environment.
Harmony is vital and UNHCR and other aid groups have established forums where refugees and host communities are being engaged in initiatives to avert or resolve differences over land, resources and even the livestock that refugees bring with them and which graze on community land. Locals in this very remote and undeveloped area of South Sudan have been told that they will be able to access facilities in the new camp such as schools and health centres and possibly find employment.
If given the go ahead, UNHCR experts will search for underground water sources. In addition, water will be trucked to the proposed new site from a well situated 12 kilometres away from Gendrassa.
UNHCR has, meanwhile, stepped up border monitoring activities at several entry points. In the contingency planning, new transit centres may be established near border entry points. People will stay at these sites until they can be transported on to a camp.
The refugee agency has also embarked on an exercise to clear the backlog of people waiting to be registered as refugees. This will allow UNHCR's registration and protection staff to devote their time to any major new influx in the coming months.
A key UNHCR partner, the World Food Programme, is also preparing for the future. WFP has pre-positioned food for 15,000 new arrivals in Jamam camp, which is scheduled to become a transit centre. Extra stocks of corn soya blend have been pre-positioned to meet the nutritional requirements of infants and young children with moderate to acute malnutrition.
The farmer Aneim believes UNHCR is doing the right thing, predicting that refugees will soon start streaming across the border into Maban County from their hiding places in the mountains and forests of Blue Nile state.
"They are suffering terribly. But here they will sleep the night without worrying about exploding bombs," he asserted. "Even if you have lost everything - as I have - this camp has given me the opportunity and the confidence to begin my life again."
By Pumla Rulashe in Maban, South Sudan
"; //This hidden field is sent with the form to fill the activeDiv property of CommentsForm HTML += "
"; HTML += ""; //The inner HTML of the div is set to the output HTML document.getElementById(activatedDiv).innerHTML = HTML; document.getElementById("selectedDiv").value = activatedDiv; return HTML; }
Newer articles:
- Slidell man detained in South Sudan - News Banner - 09/11/2012 02:12
- Desperate South Sudan Carves up Total Concession - OilPrice.com - 08/11/2012 19:10
- Syria, South Sudan hamper oil supply - FuelFix (blog) - 08/11/2012 12:46
- 'Persona non grata' in South Sudan - Aljazeera.com (blog) - 08/11/2012 11:42
- South Sudan Women Choose Family Planning, Longer Lives - Voice of America - 08/11/2012 11:23
Older news items
- Sudan rebels 'shoot down' air force bomber - AFP - 08/11/2012 10:00
- Programme: Republic of South Sudan - Reuters AlertNet - 08/11/2012 09:36
- US Department of State Announces South Sudan Basketball Coach Visit United ... - Yumanewsnow - 07/11/2012 20:06
- Elderly, sick South Sudanese fly home from Khartoum: IOM - Africa Review - 07/11/2012 12:40
- Charity set to resume drilling for water in South Sudan - Rochester Democrat and Chronicle - 06/11/2012 19:15
Latest news items (all categories):
- Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) to Auction South Sudan Bound Goods Worth Millions - 24/03/2025 18:47
- Germany Closes South Sudan Embassy Over Civil War Fears - 24/03/2025 18:39
- Could the Sudan crisis tip South Sudan into civil war? - 24/03/2025 18:34
- Uganda’s Parliament approved a plan to deploy troops to South Sudan - 24/03/2025 18:08
- South Sudan: Refugees fleeing blood flow are a constant trickle - 24/03/2025 18:05
Random articles (all categories):
- South Sudanese military spending “highest” in the region - 27/04/2015 02:10
- Continental shifts: Egypt's bid to forge consensus among African states - 07/09/2022 00:55
- The light that failed: South Sudan’s ‘new dawn’ turns to utter nightmare - 10/07/2021 23:35
- "Do you think we will prosecute ourselves?" No prospects for accountability in South Sudan - 07/10/2019 20:50
- "Be different": South Sudan lady raised in Kenya leaves US to start 19-acre farm - 10/12/2022 03:27
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 83589 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 22507 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 21810 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 20052 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 19379 times