July 22, 2010
CAR 2010 © MSF After a rise in attacks by the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) in late April, thousands of people have come to Zémio seeking refuge. Violence forces thousands to flee their homesAn upsurge in attacks by the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) in late April caused thousands of people to leave their homes and head to Zémio, a small rural town in the southeast of the Central African Republic (CAR). Since May, MSF has been providing medical support to the displaced people, as well as to the host population. View Zemio, Central African Republic in a larger map "Throughout April, the LRA made several vicious attacks on towns in this area,” said Peter Heikamp, an MSF project coordinator. “But, suddenly it wasn’t isolated attacks anymore; it was just attack after attack after attack in the small villages around Zémio, all around 35 to 40 kilometers (22 to 25 miles) away. By early May there were already several thousand displaced people in the town, and more were arriving daily. We quickly saw that the health problems could escalate, and our team in the capital, Bangui, decided to intervene as quickly as possible. We wanted to be on the ground to avoid increasing mortality, instead of reacting to increasing mortality." When an MSF team arrived in Zémio at the beginning of May, roughly 4,000 people had fled there in search of protection against the frequent LRA attacks. Authorities had allocated three sites, one on each main road leading into Zémio. A fourth camp already housed about 3,000 refugees from the Democratic Republic of Congo who had fled from LRA attacks in October of last year. “The displaced were asked to build their own huts in the camps, which was difficult at the time as there was no straw for the roofs—it was the end of the season,” said Heikamp. “So for the first two months most people lived with host families. Of course, this put an immense pressure on the local population. Imagine, some households that would usually consist of eight were now supporting 20 to 25 people. The residents were very generous, but the situation became untenable. So people moved into the camps as soon as plastic sheeting arrived and they could finish building their huts.” MSF started an outpatient department to support the local Ministry of Health hospital on May 10 and went on to set up health posts in the camps. “I think we realized quickly that the camps were where we needed to be,” said Orla Condren, an MSF nurse. “They are not built in an organized manner, but are quite chaotic, with the huts being very close to each other. We needed to be directly inside and have proximity to the people in order to avoid simple diseases from causing a bigger problem. Our clinics in the camps are quite simple with plastic roofs and wooden benches. We are concentrating on malaria, diarrhea, and chest infections.” |
© 2013 Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)
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