South Sudan – FIGHTING IN MALAKAL SITE LEAVES AT LEAST EIGHTEEN PEOPLE KILLED, TWO OF THEM MSF STAFF

MSF teams treated dozens of wounded people after last night’s violence

(Juba, 18th February) – As a result of the fighting that erupted in the Malakal Protection of Civilian (PoC) site in Malakal, at least 18 people were killed, two of them MSF South Sudanese staff members who were attacked in their homes. MSF teams received during the night in its hospital 36 wounded people, one of them an MSF staff member. More casualties are currently arriving.
 
Initial fighting went on for approximately three hours forcing around 600 people –mostly women and children – to gather inside the MSF hospital. MSF teams worked through the night to treat the injured. At least 25 of the initial intake of patients to the hospital had suffered gunshot wounds and eight of them required surgery.
 
“This attack on civilians is outrageous and we demand that armed groups stop these actions”, said Marcus Bachmann, coordinator of MSF projects in South Sudan. “People came to the PoC looking for protection and this should be a sanctuary respected by all parties.”
 
Some 40,000 people are currently sheltering in the Malakal PoC site. Many came from areas where no aid had been available for months. Most people arrived without any possessions.
 
People have been sheltering in the PoC site in Malakal since conflict erupted in the area in December 2013. The number of people living there more than doubled last year, following an influx of 10,000 displaced people in April and a further 16,000 in July and August.
 
Our thoughts are with the families of our colleagues who have lost their lives.
 
 
MSF operates a 50-bed hospital in Malakal, including a 24-hour emergency room, as well as a separate emergency room inside the PoC site. MSF has been working in the region that today constitutes the Republic of South Sudan since 1983. Today, we employ more than 2,937 South Sudanese staff and 329 international staff to respond to a wide range of medical emergencies and provide free, high quality healthcare in 18 projects across seven of South Sudan’s 10 states and the Abyei Special Administrative Area.
 



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