Far from fighting, doctor strikes aggravate healthcare collapse in Port
Sudan
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[August 28, 2023]
PORT SUDAN (Reuters) - The army-controlled coastal city of Port
Sudan has become a refuge from the war raging to the west, but its
health system is in near collapse due to power cuts and scarce supplies
- and staff shortages now exacerbated by striking doctors.
Doctors and nurses in the Red Sea city say they have not been paid for
four months, as the Sudanese government's budget has been decimated by
fighting between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).
"It is exhausting, there are many patients and there's a lot of
suffering," said Omar al-Saeed, a striking nurse at Port Sudan teaching
hospital.
"We only demand they just pay people something small so that they can
keep going."
War broke out in April, four years after the overthrow of former
President Omar al-Bashir during a popular uprising. Tensions between the
army and the RSF, which jointly staged a coup in 2021, erupted over
disagreements about a plan to transition to civilian rule.
According to the UN, more than 100,000 have fled to Port Sudan, filling
up the already dense city's hospitals and shelters, while fighting is
focussed in Khartoum and the west of the country.
United Nations aid chief Martin Griffiths has warned that the war was
fueling "a humanitarian emergency of epic proportions" in Sudan and that
several diseases, including malaria, measles, and dengue fever, were on
the rise.
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Sudanese children wait outside the
hospital while doctors and medical staff strike to protest late
salaries, bringing the struggling health sector in the city of Port
Sudan to almost a complete halt as thousands of displaced Sudanese
flooded the city due to the raging war in Khartoum, Sudan, August
20, 2023. REUTERS/Ibrahim Mohammed Ishak
Sudanese hospitals have long been
under-funded, and strikes by medical staff have been frequent. The
war, during which many hospitals in areas of fighting have been
damaged, has brought the system to its knees.
Doctors in Port Sudan have had to grapple with power cuts, intense
humidity and medicine shortages, while patients are kept in close
confines though many have respiratory illnesses, hospital officials
say.
"We are in a crisis, we pray that God eases it on us," says Ayat
Mohamed, supervisor at Dar Abnaa Al-Shamal medical centre, which is
dealing with overflow from hospitals with striking staff.
(Reporting by Ibrahim Mohammed Ishak, writing by Nafisa Eltahir;
Editing by Conor Humphries)
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