Friday, May 10, 2024

Refugees

Thousands Denied Healthcare In Cameroon As Suspension On Medical Charity Persists

Tens of thousands of people are missing out on free essential healthcare services in the restive English-speaking North West Region of Cameroon as the government maintains a suspension on the activities of medical aid group Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Border (MSF) in the region.

Authorities had in December 2020 forcefully halted the work of MSF on claims that the charity was colluding with armed separatist fighters seeking to secede from Cameroon and create their own state named ‘Ambazonia’. MSF has repeatedly denied the accusation and says it stands by its charter which requires the provision of healthcare without discrimination or heed to political or religious affiliations.

Despite MSF’s denial of wrongdoing and the necessity of healthcare provision, the government has yet to lift the ban six months after. People continue to live in limbo in a region where the government itself recently acknowledged that 30 percent of health facilities were no longer functional due to the drawn-out conflict.

MSF has now called on the government of Cameroon to allow it to resume operations and provide much-need medical and humanitarian relief to people in distress. Authorities have officially not responded to the request.

According to Emmanuel Lampaert, MSF Operations Coordinator for Central Africa, it is unacceptable that people who have fled violence into blushes are denied vital medical services for six months and counting. “This decision represents a substantial blow to medical and humanitarian access.”

Since 2018 when Doctors Without Borders started its intervention in the conflict-plagued English-speaking regions of Cameroon, it has treated patients for rape, physical and psychological torture, burns and gunshots. MSF teams have also largely handled patients in need of medical assistance for childbirth, malaria or diarrhea. Last year alone, the charity attended to 150,000 people in troubled regions.

“As we speak, our community health workers see people die and suffer because of the lack of treatment available in villages and displaced communities, and our ambulance call center continues to receive emergency requests, which they are forced to decline. What rationale can justify these unnecessary deaths?” Lampaert bemoaned.

Recent recurrent battles between government troops and increasingly bold armed separatists have exacerbated insecurity. This, coupled with Monday ghost towns, curfews, occasional lockdowns and the targeting of health facilities, have gravely disrupted access to healthcare. Economic hardship brought about by the drawn-out conflict has made it difficult for people to be able to transport themselves to health facilities or even pay for treatment. Many hospitals have suffered arson attacks or have been repurposed into military bases.

Yenfui Delphine, a young mother based in Bamenda, told Ubuntu Times she is one of those who feel the pinch of the absence of MSF. While making allusion to her son who felt seriously sick two months ago, Yenfui said MSF teams used to be there for people who had emergencies but lacked a means of transportation and money. “Without them, it is very risky getting a sick one by motorcycle [the only option available] to the nearby health facility on a ghost town day,” she said.

In 2020, MSF teams in the North West Region treated 180 survivors of sexual violence; 1,725 mental health consultations were provided; 3,272 surgeries were performed; 4,407 patients were referred by ambulance, of which more than 1,000 were women in labor; 42,578 consultations were provided by community health volunteers, mostly for malaria, diarrhea and respiratory tract infections.

Lampaert said MSF staff, volunteers and patients have regularly faced threats and violence from both state and non-state armed groups, with very little respect shown for the humanitarian principles of impartiality and neutrality. “Our ambulances have been fired on and stolen, community health workers have faced sexual assault and murder, armed men have opened fire inside medical facilities, and our colleagues have faced death threats. Despite these extremely difficult situations, our staff kept on providing care to people in need, day after day.”

Since 2017, Cameroon’s two English-speaking regions have been ravaged by a bloody socio-political conflict. Low-level protests erupted in 2016 against decades of marginalization of the minority Anglophones by the Francophone-dominated government of long-serving President Paul Biya. The government responded with force and pushed many to the extreme, triggering an unending war.

To date, it is estimated that over 5,000 civilians, soldiers and separatist fighters have been killed, while no fewer than three million others are affected by the conflict. The war has internally displaced 712,800, according to OCHA and the UN refugee agency – United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has registered 66,718 people who have crossed over the border to Nigeria as refugees.

Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) Rejects Targeting Of Refugees

Khartoum, June 25 — A delegation from the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) secretariat visited the Al-Sheqla camp in which a refugee from South Sudan was recently killed.

The delegation listened to the people who spoke about accumulated cases of injustice. During the meeting, the refugees frankly expressed their anger.

Condolence

The camp residents met with visitors from the (SPA) secretarial delegation. They were welcomed with deep joy. The residents considered the SPA’s visit a compassionate move, indicating that they are paying attention to the issues of vulnerability.

The delegation headed by Abdel Rahman Nour-Aldine accompanied by Othman Abu Al-Hassan, offered condolences to the widow of the late refugee; killed last week within the camp, meanwhile, the (SPA) members condemned the killing of the refugee describing it as a barbaric act and unacceptable.

Furthermore, the delegation discussed the health of the late man’s children. The children narrated their suffering with great sadness for the great loss of their father.

The late man’s wife revealed that doctors were to conduct an operation in the stomach of her son earlier, but for financial reasons, they were not able to perform the operation.

Joy and disappointment

In the same context, the delegation of the secretariat met the camp chiefs, who expressed their great happiness to receive the (SPA) delegation so that they can listen to their suffering and look after the camp resident’s problems.

The chiefs criticized the South Sudan embassy for not fulfilling their promises, and neglected them, he confirmed that until now, no member of the diplomatic mission from the embassy had come along to know the circumstances of their situation.

Sudanese Professionals Association
Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) conveying to the widow and children of the late South Sudanese refugee who was killed within the Al-Sheqla Camp, Khartoum, Sudan. Credit: Bathumi Ayul / Ubuntu Times

Chiefs concluded their speech by sending a message to the new revolution government in Sudan represented by the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA), describing what is currently happening to South Sudanese refugees as having nothing to do with the revolution slogans where the youth sang “freedom, peace, justice.”

In another context, one of the chiefs indicated that the camp is approaching ten years now, but lacking basic needs of life, he affirmed that they have no problem with their brothers from Nuba as it is rumored, that the problem is between the camp residents and the people of the Nuba Mountains in Khartoum, who live in the vicinity of the camp. They lived in the midst of a population and knew them well, he explained that they lived with them for long, and knew each other. He added that they had a problem with one of the families of the police officers ranked as a captain, abusing his powers. He noted that they are reasons behind their suffering.

Law is the path of justice

The spokesman for the youth in the camp stressed that they did not respond to the crime of murder or even desire for revenge, despite the pain, explaining that as young men, they pledged not to react and make a reckless move despite the unacceptable killing against their son and that they are sticking to the path of law to take the course of justice, urging the delegation to ensure justice for their son.

Self-control

After all the speakers from the camp ended, a member of the Sudanese Professionals Association secretariat, Nour-Aldine, began his speech for a second time with condolences to the family of the deceased and all camp residents and assured them of their total condemnation and rejection of such crimes, he described it as barbaric behavior that goes against the spirit of the Sudanese revolution, that arose as a result of injustice faced during the previous government.

Sudanese Professionals Association
Abdul Rahman Nour-Aldine, member of SPA secretariat delegation addressing the Al-Sheqla camp residents in Khartoum, Sudan. Credit: Bathumi Ayul / Ubuntu Times

He explained that they came to reshape the Sudanese reality and not to see such crimes occur again. He praised the spirit of the camp’s youth that refused to take revenge and being drawn into the violence—demanding that they exercise restraint and avoid the troublemakers.

(SPA) pledge

The member of the secretariat, Nour-Aldine, pledged to the camp residents to work with the relevant authorities to resolve the encroachment on the refugee camps and confirmed that they will cooperate with the Peace Wings initiative (PWI) and whoever is interested in legalizing and protecting the camps, to ensure their security inside the camp. “We as Sudanese Professionals Association are not an executive body, but through our channels, we will work to finalize all these issues,” Nour-Aldine added.

He promised the camp residents that they will communicate with all initiatives to link them with the relevant authorities to reflect the problems of the camps and what is happening to them and who is behind that suffering.

Sudanese Professionals Association With South Sudanese Activists Discuss Refugees’ Condition In Sudan

Khartoum, June 22 — In a meeting that gathered activists from South Sudan with the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) headquarters in Burri—Khartoum, a number of issues related to the situation of the South Sudanese refugees in Sudan were discussed.

Abdul Rahman Nor Aldin Madani, a member of the secretariat of Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) Executive Committee, said that they are interested in this meeting because it is a good gesture to understand the sporadic problems that the people of South Sudan are being exposed to in the camps and their residential areas inside the capital in Khartoum and across the country, referring to the recent Al-Geref East events that led to burning of refugees shelters by Sudanese youth, describing it as unfortunate and unacceptable.

In the same context, Madani praised the activists’ initiative to oversee on the status of refugees issues that are facing recognition problem according to international declarations, explaining that it will affect learning a lot about the refugee situation in Sudan, especially issues related to refugee protection in accordance to international humanitarian laws.

He revealed that, as a concerned body that care about the condition of the people within the country, they promise to do their best to address issues concerning South Sudanese refugees a few days back.

Meanwhile, Dr. Ayul Quob the chair of the Peace Wings Initiative (PWI) expressed their great pleasure to Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) for accepting the meeting to discuss such issues, confirming his confidence that the leadership of (SPA) will run to solve the problems that are now taking place regarding the conditions of South Sudanese refugees in Sudan so that they enjoy their full legal rights as refugees.

On Saturday, a young South Sudanese refugee was killed by an unknown person in the camp after a group of youth attacked the Alshegla Refugees Camp, East Khartoum.

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