Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has suspended all operational activities in Yei River and Morobo counties in South Sudan’s Central Equatoria State for a minimum of six weeks following the abduction of an MSF staff member, occurring just four days after the abduction of health ministry staff from an MSF ambulance on the same road and location. Fortunately, our colleague was released some hours after the abduction.
The incident occurred on July 29 during an evacuation of MSF staff from Morobo to Yei amid deteriorating security conditions. The four-vehicle convoy was stopped by armed gunmen who ordered the MSF staff member, who was serving as the team leader of the convoy, out of the vehicle and pulled him into the thickets, while allowing the other vehicles and staff to proceed to Yei.
“We are outraged by this targeted attack,” said Dr. Ferdinand Atte, MSF’s head of mission in South Sudan. “Attacks on humanitarian workers serving the most vulnerable members of the society must stop. While we are deeply committed to providing care to those in need, we cannot keep our staff working in an unsafe environment.”