Death Gets A New Name In South Sudan

Death Gets A New Name In South Sudan

For the first time in six years, the United Nations declared a famine.

Something extraordinary happened last week – something that should have been cause for alarm and a source of shame for every caring person. For the first time in six years, the United Nations declared a famine.

The UN does not use that word lightly. A famine is defined by internationally recognized guidelines and specific numerical criteria. The formula adds up to heart-wrenching human misery that equals widespread death from starvation or a lethal combination of undernourishment and disease.

That is the grim reality in South Sudan, where people are dying of hunger every day. Every day.

The plight of South Sudan may have gotten lost in the other horrifying news last week that 20 million people in Africa, mostly women and children, are facing devastating food shortages. The suffering spans four countries — Somalia, Yemen, Nigeria and South Sudan — but South Sudan is the only one that has hit rock bottom with a full-blown famine in two counties.

The other countries, and the areas of South Sudan that do not yet meet the criteria for a famine, are hurtling toward that abyss.

People on the brink of famine will do anything to escape its pull and that of the tragic violence of conflict. Desperate survivors from South Sudan were pouring into the Gambella refugee camp in Ethiopia at a rate of more than 20,000 a month when I visited the sprawling facility in 2014.

I have seen a lot of suffering in my role as a UN Messenger of Peace with a focus on hunger and extreme poverty, but Gambella was a new experience.

Despite the best efforts of dedicated UN workers, NGOs and the Government of Ethiopia, the camp was overwhelmed by the unending stream of desperate, hungry people. It was a muddy hellhole.

The vast majority of the refugees – about 90% ― were women and children. Many lived in squalor, with little or no protection against the rain.

I will never forget one mother I met – a proud women, who had walked with her children for days to reach the relative safety of Gambella. She had no idea where her husband was, or even whether he was still alive. He had been swept up in the conflict that remains the root cause of her country’s descent into chaos.

She told me what her life was like before she became a refugee. Her husband had a job, they had a house, their children went to school. Now, through no fault of her own, she was squatting in the mud in a refugee camp, where she was afraid of being raped if she had to use the outdoor toilet at night.

At that time, there were 170,000 South Sudanese refugees in Gambella. Today, there are more than 280,000.

And they are the lucky ones.

The unlucky ones are the nearly 5 million South Sudanese who are in desperate need of food – and the 15 million others in the same dire situation in Somalia, Yemen and Nigeria.

The 100,000 South Sudanese who struggle to survive beyond the brink, in the famine zone, are the most unlucky of all. The sad reality is, it may too late to save many of them. But it is not to late to pull others back from the brink.

By the time the last famine was declared by the United Nations, in Somalia in 2011, it had already claimed the lives of a quarter million people. The world has a chance to avoid that kind of death toll again.

“Famine is already a reality in parts of South Sudan. Unless we act now, it is only a matter of time until it affects other areas and other countries,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in appealing for help last week. “We are facing a tragedy; we must avoid it becoming a catastrophe.”

Just as famine is defined by numbers, so, too, is the antidote. The UN needs to raise $4.4 billion by the end of March to avert widespread famine. So far, it has raised $90 million – about 2 cents for every dollar needed.

What can you do? Contribute to the World Food Programme and other UN agencies on the front line of the fight against famine. Urge your government to contribute humanitarian aide. Let others know what is happening in South Sudan and to 20 million people teetering on the brink of famine.

Secretary-General Guterres was right when he said, “The lives of millions of people depend on our collective ability to act. In our world of plenty, there is no excuse for inaction or indifference. We have heard the alerts. Now there is no time to lose.”


This article originally appeared in Huffington Post in March 2017. 

We are all children under the same Sun and realizing our Unity as global society with global drastic decreasing of defense budgets and all kinds of weapons due raising Individual & Global Awareness, resulting in global cooperation instead of small minded egoistic & nationalistic mistrust will accelerate this New Dawn of a much more peaceful global society with a global mindset concerning global problems leaving nationalistic mindset as a fossil out of the past, transforming and transcending in this New Dawn of a healthy, harmonious and peaceful global society, because only a global mindset concerning us all as global society will lead us to this situation all people with a normal common sense are longing for. Of course easier said then done, but not impossible and easier to achieve then ever before in recent human History due this Zeitgeist of global communication and global merging in all kinds of ways. We just need kind of enlightened leadership aiming this direction of global collaboration regarding Earth and inhabitants as a Unity in diversity, as time will tell...

odri seva

Declarator #thehumanrighttobehealthy, Guidance Counselor in TECH-WORK Volunteer Collaborations, Author

5 年

So sad to read this... thanks... Princess.

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Charmayne Platt

CEO at CHHP Properties, Former Director of the Board for Olave Baden-Powell Society (OB-PS), Former Vice Chair Friends of WAGGGS USA

6 年

It is so disheartening to read of the hunger, a basic need for humans. I through the Girl Guides and Girl Scouts travel to India, Pune, in particular where we are helping out in the community on a daily basis. I have also seen the hunger, seen children 2 years old walking the streets looking for food, no parents, sleeping on the streets, we have many projects we help with, where Sister Lucy has opened centres to help the slum children as they are called, pregnant women cast out on the streets or burned as their husbands no longer want them. Your work you are doing is so good, I too am a devoted wife, mother and humanitarian and I won't stop until I am too old. So many need our help for basic needs. Thanks for all you do.

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