“The gap analysis that we have done shows that the needs are greatest among the recent IDPs,” David Tolu Lemiso, health project manager at the NGO Nile Hope Development Foundation (NHDF), said. “Out of 3,442 households from Nyandit, 2,050 are still badly in need of help, and that is minus those from Wanding, Kuechar and Ogal payams [sub-divisions].”
“The IDPs have put a lot of stress on a host community that was already struggling,” Simon Buony, education project manager at the NHDF, said. “The closure of the river has made matters worse for everybody.”
Locals in Akobo said armed men were still a threat along the Sobat River and had “really punished the Lou Nuer of Akobo”. Apart from cutting off trade and food supplies, the blockage since June had also stopped supplies to schools, they told IRIN.
Construction of some classrooms at Akobo township primary school, for example, has stalled because building materials procured from Malakal could not reach Akobo after commercial boats too stopped plying the route.
The school, which has 2,655 pupils in addition to a large number of IDP children, has several classes studying under the few trees in the compound. Bhan Tut, the headmaster, said they had introduced two shifts to try to contain the IDP influx.
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Recently, Lise Grande, UN Deputy Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Southern Sudan, met leaders from Upper Nile State and counties along the Sobat, including Baliet, Panyikang, Ulang and Nassir, to discuss the river closure.
“Re-opening the Sobat River is vital if a long-term humanitarian disaster is to be avoided,” Iain McDonald, head of the World Food Programme (WFP) in Southern Sudan, said.
Peacekeepers deployed by the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS) to Akobo told IRIN the situation along the river was calm, but tension and mistrust between the Jikany Nuer in Nassir and the Lou Nuer in Akobo persist.
Some IDPs said if the food situation improved, they could return to their villages. “If I had shelter and food, I would forget the fear [of cattle raiders] and return to Nyandit,” one old man told IRIN at the makeshift camp in Akobo peace conference centre.
Akobo County information officer John Ter said the rains were needed so that people could plant crops. “The food donations can never be enough,” he told IRIN. “People here used to grow sorghum, maize, beans, okra and pumpkins. They can do that again – if only the rains fall.”
Aid workers worry that unsafe roads, more displacement and declining agricultural activity across Southern Sudan could increase the demand for humanitarian assistance over the coming months for both the host and displaced communities in Akobo.
“Last year, Akobo experienced floods; in April some food was burnt in attacks by the Murle, then came the IDPs, then the river blockage and now there is no rain,” Ter added, “Only God knows what will happen next.”
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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions
