PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd – South Sudan

"We the willing, led by the unknowing, are doing the impossible for the ungrateful. We have done so much, with so little, for so long, we are now qualified to do anything, with nothing" By Konstantin Josef Jireček, a Czech historian, diplomat and slavist.

UNHCR PRESS RELEASE: UNHCR concerned for refugees’ welfare as rains pound Maban county

3 min read
Juba, 12 September 2012 – The UN refugee agency is concerned about the
welfare of refugees in the four camps in Maban County, Upper Nile State,
hard hit by heavy rains over the past few days.

UNHCR is working with local authorities as well as other UN agencies to
mitigate flooding damage and to put in place emergency response
measures.

“Our top priority is to make sure that refugees do not suffer because
of this extreme weather, which is already affecting the local population
in certain areas of Bunj town.” said Mireille Girard, UNHCR’s
representative for South Sudan.

Yesterday the main road through Bunj, capital of Maban County, to the
three camps of Doro, Yusuf Batil and Gendrassa was flooded. Although the
road is badly affected, a UNHCR and UNOPS assessment team managed to
reach the three camps, which collectively host about 89,500 refugees.
All camps were found to be muddy as is normal in this season but without
major flooding. [UNOPS, a UN agency that provides management services to
humanitarian operations, is maintaining roads in support of humanitarian
operations in Maban county.]

“We are watching the situation closely and we hope we will be able to
continue providing services and relief items as normal to the 108,000
refugees we are assisting in Maban County,” said Girard.

Initial reports indicate that Jamam (the fourth camp) is not seriously
affected by the floods at this stage. Jamam is situated 70km from Bunj
and currently hosts about 18,500 Sudanese refugees. The refugee
population in Jamam has been cut by almost 50% through the relocation to
the new site at Gendrassa. That exercise is continuing.

The road leading from Jamam to Gendrassa is deteriorating with the
heavy rains and the passage of humanitarian trucks.

“We are intensifying efforts by calling in extra crews from private
companies to complement UNOPS’ work on the road,” Girard added.
“With the current flooding in the Bunj area, these engineering
teams will be overstretched in the coming weeks to secure vital
humanitarian access and complete the all-important work of moving
refugees to drier ground.”

UNHCR has joined a flood-response team convened by county authorities,
along with experts from the local government and other UN agencies.

ENDS

For further information, please contact:
Juba:  Teresa Ongaro, mobile: +211 927 770 040; ongaro@unhcr.org
Nairobi:  Kitty McKinsey, mobile: +254 735 337 608mckinsey@unhcr.org

Geneva:  Fatoumata Lejeune-Kaba, mobile +41 79 249 3483;
lejeunek@unhcr.org

HCRJuba_12Sep12_FloodsSouth Sudan.pdf HCRJuba_12Sep12_FloodsSouth Sudan.pdf
59K   View    Download

About Post Author