In
this photo taken on Friday, Sept. 16, 2016, Elizabeth Athiel holds her
8-month-old malnourished daughter Anger, at a UNICEF clinic in Aweil, South
Sudan. (AP Photo/Justin Lynch)
|
The mother faced an
anguished decision: choosing which of her children to save.
Associated
Press report continues:
With
hunger gripping this remote region of South Sudan, Elizabeth Athiel could
either get urgent medical attention for her 8-month-old daughter, Anger, or
make sure her other five children could eat.
The
little girl was shockingly thin, but the medical clinic was a half-day's walk
away, and she would have to wait there for days until recovery. "I can't
leave the others alone here," Athiel said, holding Anger in her arms. It
is not known what later happened to the child.
Her
family is another victim of South Sudan's civil war — in a part of the country
that hasn't even seen fighting.
Here
in the government stronghold of Northern Bahr el Ghazal region, there are
indications of famine. One-third of children in the region are estimated to be
acutely malnourished. If resources remain limited, more children will die, said
Mahimbo Mdoe, the UNICEF representative in South Sudan.
The
food crisis is evidence of how the conflict has devastated South Sudan's
ability to function. Since December 2013, tens of thousands of people have been
killed. More than one million refugees have fled. The U.N. calls South Sudan
one of the world's worst humanitarian crises.
Even
as President Salva Kiir and his government have repeatedly promised full
humanitarian access to this and other areas, South Sudanese officials have
restricted aid amid hostility at the international community over its attempts
to calm the fighting and protect civilians.
During
a visit by The Associated Press to Aweil in mid-September, aid airdrops by the
World Food Program had been suspended because the government imposed what it
called additional security requirements. They later resumed but were suspended
again this week.
Minister
of Information Michael Makuei recently told reporters that WFP had been
"intransigent" with his government.
"Did
they come here for humanitarian services? They came there for their own
ulterior objectives," Makuei said, reflecting some officials' view that
the U.N., with its peacekeeping mission and aid agencies, had too much
authority.
Meanwhile,
South Sudan's government spends 44 percent of its budget on military and
security, but just 11 percent on health, education and humanitarian affairs,
according to the finance ministry.
"The
government knows that it doesn't have to spend money on health care and
education because the international community is always going to do it for
them, and they can spend it on weapons instead," one diplomat said on
condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
South
Sudan has long suffered from periods of hunger. The fighting has only made it
worse.
Between
4 and 5 million people are at risk of death if they do not receive food
assistance, according to WFP, and Northern Bahr el Ghazal has been hit hardest.
Roughly 60 percent of the population faces levels of hunger described as
"crisis," ''emergency" or "catastrophic," according to
U.N. agencies.
"I
used to eat three times per day. Now I eat once," said Nyibol Dut, a
mother who said the price of two liters of grain had reached 350 South Sudanese
pounds, compared to 20 pounds two years ago.
Aweil's
dusty streets were lined with ripe tomatoes, onions, and watermelon, but most
are unaffordable. Here, food prices are 10 times higher than they were last
year, according to the government.
Civil
war has "affected trade seriously," said Aweil Governor Ronald Ruay
Deng as he sat under a tree in his walled compound. But he defended government
restrictions on aid delivery, calling security crucial for any humanitarian
response.
At
times, aid workers in South Sudan hardly know who to deal with for permission
to operate. They described a dizzying web of middlemen from the government,
opposition and local defense militias that is the source of many delays.
"In
a country that doesn't act like a country, permission from the president just
isn't sufficient," one humanitarian official said, speaking on condition
of anonymity for fear of retribution from the government.
Amid
the hunger crisis, some South Sudanese are doing the unthinkable. They have
fled by the tens of thousands into neighboring Sudan, the country they fought
for years before achieving South Sudan's independence in 2011 as the world's
youngest country.
At
least 50,000 South Sudanese have even moved to Sudan's conflict-ridden Darfur
region this year, the U.N. has said.
Taril
Tong confirmed that many in his village have moved to Sudan after heavy rains
destroyed crops, but he said he won't join them.
"This is our
country," he said proudly.
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