Perilous Times and Climate Change
Floods in south Sudan leave nearly 60,000 homeless
JUBA, Sudan | Tue Aug 31, 2010 4:21pm EDT
JUBA, Sudan (Reuters) - Floods have displaced nearly 60,000 people in
the last month in south Sudan with many at risk of malaria and other
diseases, the semi-autonomous region's government said Tuesday.
The crisis is another hurdle for the war-ravaged south ahead of a
referendum on independence in January, which some analysts fear will be
hindered by a worsening humanitarian situation with almost half the
region's 8 million population short of food.
"In the last one month 57,135 people have been displaced by the
floods," said the south's undersecretary for health Olivia Lomoro,
adding that many were at risk of malaria and water-borne diseases.
She said Aweil, the capital of Northern Bahr El-Ghazal state, was
ground zero for the crisis. The area was one of the hardest hit in a
two-decade long civil war and is already heavily reliant on
international food aid.
The south's health minister, Luka Monoja, told a news conference that
rains were expected to continue until October, meaning the worst may be
yet to come.
Northern Bahr El-Ghazal is due to receive some of the 1.5 million
people the government plans to bring home from the north before the
January vote.
The United Nations says it has already helped feed some 4 million
southerners in 2010 and warns voting preparations may heap more stress
on the region.
Analysts fear the mounting humanitarian crisis will add to problems of
insecurity ahead of the January 9 vote and destabilize a newly
independent state should the referendum pass.
The mainly Christian and animist south has fought a bitter civil war
against the mainly Muslim north over ethnicity, ideology and resources
for all but a few years since 1955.
The plebiscite is the climax of a 2005 peace deal ending Africa's
longest running civil war.
(Editing by Opheera McDoom and Noah Barkin)