South Sudan: Coronavirus cases confirmed inside UN civilian protection site
13 May 2020
The South Sudanese Government has confirmed that two cases of COVID-19 have been identified inside a Protection of Civilians (PoC) site in the capital, Juba, although the world’s youngest nation has been relatively unscathed by the pandemic, with 74 cases recorded so far.
The UN Peacekeeping mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) told the UN Spokesperson’s Office on Wednesday that the appearance of cases within one of the camps in the capital was “not unexpected, given the rising number of cases confirmed within communities across the city.”
“The UN continues to urge displaced people in the sites to follow prevention measures such as social distancing, handwashing, and isolating themselves if they become sick”, Stéphane Dujarric told reporters during the regular online briefing in New York.
According to UNMISS figures released last month, there are just over 190,000 civilians sheltering in PoC sites, with close to 30,000 at the Juba site.
Over 200,000 civilians sought protection at UN sites during the height of the long-running civil war, that escalated in 2013, between government forces, and opposition fighters loyal to President Salva Kiir’s then deputy, Riek Machar.
In recent months, the brutal conflict that left tens-of-thousands dead and millions displaced, has abated, with the formation in mid-March of a new unity cabinet, in which Mr. Machar returned to the Vice-Presidency, fulfilling a chief condition of a comprehensive 2018 peace agreement.
UN prevention efforts
Across the country, the UN has been broadcasting prevention messages through the UNMISS-run Radio Miraya radio station, as well as from inside protection sites, said Mr. Dujarric, as well as helping to double the water supply and increase the number of handwashing facilities. Enough food for families to survive for three months, months, has been distributed in advance.
“This means that people don’t have to travel often between the camps and the town to purchase supplies”, added the Spokesperson.
“The UN will continue providing this support and encouraging people living in the sites to follow prevention measures as much as possible.”
According to news reports, aid workers in South Sudan have warned that treatment options for severe COVID-19 cases are scarce, with little more than some isolation centers in place.
Most of those infected so far, have reportedly been treated at home, although an isolation unit at the Dr. John Garang Infectious Diseases Unit, is reportedly being expanded from 24 beds to 80.
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