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Sudan Schools Repurposed as Hospitals


FILE: Patients in Khartoum's twin city of Omdurman are shown on June 10, 2019 receiving treatment during a visit organized by Sudan's Health Ministry which claimed protestors blocking roads as part as a civil disobedience campaign disrupted services the previous day.
FILE: Patients in Khartoum's twin city of Omdurman are shown on June 10, 2019 receiving treatment during a visit organized by Sudan's Health Ministry which claimed protestors blocking roads as part as a civil disobedience campaign disrupted services the previous day.

OMDURMAN, SUDAN - In a Sudan school turned makeshift hospital, a volunteer doctor hooks up a patient lying on a desk to an intravenous drip while nurses hand out medicines donated by neighbors.

Young activists have taken matters into their own hands since fighting erupted on April 15 between the army led by Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces of his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.

As war has raged on, destroying many clinics, this school building in Omdurman, Khartoum's twin city across the Nile, has become an emergency healthcare center.

A chalk message written on a blackboard outside says the volunteer-run field hospital provides free general medical care, minor operations and other services.

The volunteer medics treat children and people with diabetes, hypertension and other chronic illnesses, which are "now 10 times deadlier than bullets," said the doctor, Mohammed al-Taher.

The fighting has also led many health professionals to flee and driven a "real brain drain", says the U.N. World Health Organization [WHO].

Remaining medical staff are now teaching volunteers to tend to the wounded.

"We train young people in first aid in case they are faced with wounded people in the midst of combat," Taher said.

Maha Mohammed is one of many volunteers looking after fellow Sudanese citizens in need.

She runs the small field hospital's pharmacy, its shelves sparsely stocked with medicine and serum bags.

The young woman in a black abaya pleaded for "more donations" as the bulk of food and medical aid have either been looted or remain stuck at the sites of violent battles.

Mohammed said that "we must help each other before expecting foreign help. I urge people who have medicine at home to bring it here."

At the hospital, two women stood behind a window, registering new patients lined up in the courtyard.

"Our neighborhood is under fire, many hospitals had to close," volunteer Ashraf told AFP. "So people come here to get free treatment from doctors in the neighborhood."

The public health sector has long been fragile in Sudan, where 65 per cent of the population lives in poverty. Now it faces compounded challenges, with three quarters of hospitals in combat zones out of service, according to the country's doctors' union.

The fighting has left 12,000 dialysis patients at risk of dying as hospitals have run out of medication and fuel to power generators, the union said.

Since the war erupted, at least 1,800 people have been killed. More than a million have been displaced within Sudan and nearly 350,000 have fled to other countries.

- 'This war will pass' -

The fighting has impeded the delivery of the humanitarian aid that 25 million people - over half the population - now desperately need, according to the U.N.

Aid workers, who count 18 deaths among their ranks, say it is difficult for aid to flow despite the multiple ceasefires that have been agreed and quickly violated.

In a "major breakthrough", the World Food Program said Monday that it had begun reaching thousands of Khartoum's trapped residents.

There are fears that the summer rainy season will soon bring seasonal epidemics like malaria, which wreaks havoc in Sudan every year, while a shortage of drinking water could drive a cholera outbreak.

The rains will also make parts of Sudan hard to reach, according to aid agencies.

But Ashraf remained optimistic that his home country, which has been ravaged by multiple civil wars and military coups since gaining independence in 1956, will also overcome the current turmoil.

"This war will pass," he said. "We have seen many crises in Sudan, and each time we think: this will be the last. But this one will end too."

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