A view of the Protection of Civilians (POC) site near Bentiu, in Unity
State, South Sudan, which houses over 40,000 IDPs 25 August 2014 (Photo UN/JC
McIlwaine; Image source: Sudan Tribune)
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Weeks after UN-backed
experts warned that thousands are dying of starvation in South Sudan war zones,
aid agencies say they cannot access areas to stave off famine because of
"spiralling" violence. Last month, UN agencies said 30,000 people were
starving to death in Unity state, with Integrated Food Security Phase
Classification (IPC) experts warning of a "concrete risk of famine"
before the end of the year if fighting continues and aid does not reach the
hardest hit areas.
300,000 in
need of food aid in Unity State – UN
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Despite
the warnings and an August peace deal, there has been no let-up in government
and rebel battles, with diplomats accusing both sides of blockading life-saving
aid.
AFP report continues:
Medical
aid agency Doctors Without Borders (MSF) warns that the "humanitarian
crisis in southern Unity is on an unprecedented scale" with "repeated
and targeted violence" against civilians.
MSF,
which has earned a reputation for operating in some of the world's most
dangerous frontline battle zones, said it had "not seen this level of violence
and brutality before."
While
an official famine has not been declared, the IPC report describes the worst
conditions yet seen in a nearly two-year civil war marked by atrocities and
accusations of war crimes, including gang rape and forced cannibalism.
Having
been forced to flee their homes, many people are living in the open, said
Lindsay Hamsik, policy advisor at South Sudan NGO Forum, an alliance of over
300 South Sudanese and international aid agencies.
"The
commitments at the political level are not being held up on the ground,"
Hamsik told AFP. "That means more lives are being lost and civilians
continue to be terrorized and denied their right to assistance."
Those
worst affected are in the northern battleground state of Unity, once the
country's key oil producing region, but now scene of some of the heaviest
fighting, including the mass abduction and rape of women and children.
"All
parties urgently need to lift obstacles that prevent access of humanitarian
organizations," the United States and European Union warned last week, in
a statement also signed by diplomats from Canada, Norway and Switzerland.
"This
is crucial to avoid the looming famine."
Most
aid agencies were forced to pull out in May amid intense fighting.
"Our
efforts to re-secure access have failed," said Caelin Briggs from the
Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC). "While we are eager to return, and we
will take any window that we can, we cannot do so unless the violence comes to
a halt."
Aid
workers said they feared that without boots on the ground, they simply may not
know the full extent of the crisis.
The
International Rescue Committee (IRC) said people were "hiding in the
swamps and bushes" and that they were struggling with the "limited
availability of evidence".
Some
3.9 million people are in crisis — a third of the country's population — a
massive 80 percent rise compared to the same period last year, the UN said.
Civil
war began in December 2013 when President Salva Kiir accused his former deputy
Riek Machar of planning a coup, setting off a cycle of retaliatory killings
that have split the poverty-stricken, landlocked country along ethnic lines.
The
army and rebels have repeatedly accused each other of breaking an
internationally-brokered August 26 ceasefire, the eighth such agreement aimed
at ending the nearly two-year long war.
"MSF
teams in Unity state hear daily reports of extortions, abductions, mass rapes
and killings, and witnessed villages burnt to the ground and crops looted and
destroyed," MSF added.
Hardest
hit are the counties of Leer, Guit, Koch and Mayendit in Unity State. MSF's
base in Leer was looted on October 3, forcing MSF to close the hospital for the
second time since May. Leer, hometown of rebel chief Machar, has swapped hands
several times in the war.
Civil
war began when President Salva Kiir accused his former deputy
Riek Machar of planning a coup
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In
the latest violence, ceasefire monitors from the East African IGAD bloc blamed
government forces who they said "looted medical supplies and other
equipment" when they pushed out rebels in Leer in early October.
"Violence
against the civilian population is escalating," MSF emergency manager Tara
Newell said. Before staff were forced to evacuate, dozens of children depended
on specialized feeding to survive.
With
no aid, "those children who were already identified to be severely malnourished
are very likely to have died," Newell added.
Aid
workers are gloomy for the future.
"People have exhausted
the last of their coping mechanisms," Hamsik said. "It's already a
humanitarian crisis, and it will get worse."
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