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Sudan Tribune

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WHO, partners call for urgent action to tackle health, humanitarian crisis

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus speaking in Lyon France on September 27, 2021 (AP photo)

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus speaking in Lyon France on September 27, 2021 (AP photo)

September 9, 2024 (PORT SUDAN) – The World Health Organization (WHO) has reaffirmed its commitment to reach all Sudanese in need, calling on the international community to urgently act to end the extreme health and humanitarian crisis.

The revelation follows a successfully-concluded two-day mission by the WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus and Regional Director Dr Hanan Balkhy to Port Sudan.

According to a statement extended to Sudan Tribune, Dr Tedros and Dr Balkhy met with Sudanese leaders, including Lt. Gen. Abdul Fatah Al-Burhan, Chairman of Sudan’s Transitional Sovereignty Council; Deputy Chairman of Sudan’s Sovereignty Council Dr. Malik Agar; and Federal Minister of Health Dr. Haitham Mohamed Ibrahim Awadallah during the visit.

The discussions centered on the devastating impact of the ongoing conflict and the critical need for unhindered humanitarian access to ensure that life-saving assistance reaches all those in need.

“The international community has seemingly forgotten about Sudan and is paying little heed to the conflict tearing it apart, with serious repercussions for the region,” Dr Tedros told a press conference.

“That is why I have come to Sudan. I am here, with my sister Dr Hanan Balkhy, WHO Eastern Mediterranean Regional Director, to meet with the wide range of partners involved in the response, and to call for urgent and scaled up action to provide more resources, more access to humanitarian aid, and more security to health workers and the patients they serve,” he added.

The WHO boss called on the world to wake up and help Sudan out of the nightmare it is living through.

“We must not fail the people of Sudan,” he stressed.

Much of Sudan’s health system has been devastated by the ongoing war, with more than 100 attacks on healthcare facilities leading to significant casualties among health workers and patients.

Reports indicate that the insecurity has forced many health workers to flee with their families, worsening the shortage of medical staff. This exodus has further weakened the health system’s ability to provide essential services, leaving many Sudanese without access to critical care.

The high-level WHO mission included a visit to a nutrition stabilization center supported by WHO, where Dr Tedros and Dr Balkhy saw firsthand the impact of the malnutrition crisis gripping Sudan.

Currently, 3.6 million children are reportedly acutely malnourished, with 730 000 suffering from severe acute malnutrition. The ongoing conflict has exacerbated food insecurity, making it increasingly difficult to deliver essential nutrition and health services to vulnerable populations.

At an internally displaced persons camp, Dr Tedros and Dr Balkhy saw the difficult living conditions the people face. The camp’s residents are struggling with a lack of food, medicine, and clean water, exposing them to heightened risk of disease outbreaks and other health threats.

The daily risks include threat of gender-based violence, particularly against the estimated four million women and girls at risk due to the ongoing conflict.

Dr Balkhy emphasized the critical need to respect the sanctity of healthcare, in line with international humanitarian law.

“Sudan’s health infrastructure is in ruins, with many facilities destroyed, looted, or abandoned. To rebuild and stabilize the health system, there must be significant investment not only in restoring facilities but also in strengthening the health workforce,” she said.

The economic recovery and future stability of Sudan are at risk without a functioning health system, stressed Dr. Balkhy.

The WHO Regional Director said their priority is to ensure that every Sudanese in need receives the assistance they require, wherever they are in the country.

This, she told the press conference, will only be possible through sustained peace, substantial investment in health infrastructure, and full, unimpeded access for humanitarian efforts across Sudan by whatever means needed, including both cross-line and cross-border from neighboring countries.

“The only way forward is peace, for which the warring parties themselves have the greatest responsibility, with support from the international community. The world must not look away—this crisis demands our immediate and collective response”, noted Dr. Balkhy.

Aid agencies say the conflict in Sudan has left some 25 million people in dire need of humanitarian aid.

Of these, however, 14.7 million require urgent assistance for a range of life-saving support, for which the humanitarian sector has requested US$ 2.7 billion, which is less than half of the funding required.

Meanwhile WHO said its current funding gap for the Sudan health crisis is concerning, with only 24% received out of the total amount it requested for, severely limiting the ability to address the crisis.

(ST)