Hospital bombing deepens bleak situation for war-weary South Sudanese
07.08.2025 - 17:58:21NEW YORK, 06 May 2025 / PRN Africa / -- Aid teams in South Sudan warned on Tuesday that repeated attacks on healthcare including the bombing of a hospital in eastern Jonglei state at the weekend are just the latest of the âmultiple vulnerabilitiesâ the countryâs people face.
âEvery time this happens, people lose access to health services â and sometimes, to hope,â said Dr Humphrey Karamagi, the UN World Health Organization (WHO)âs Representative in South Sudan. âHealth is the last safety net. If it fails, everything else will also fall.â
The apparent airstrike on the hospital run by Médecins Sans FrontiÚres (MSF) in Old Fangak in eastern Jonglei state, killed seven civilians and injured another 20, according to the UN humanitarian affairs coordination office (OCHA).
Healthcare not a target
The attack is the eighth time healthcare has been targeted since January âwith health workers killed, facilities and essential supplies looted or destroyedâ, the WHO official told journalists in Geneva.
âMore attacks may lead to closing half the health facilities along the Nile,â he added.
Dr. Karamagi explained that humanitarian convoys and essential cold chain infrastructure had come under fire, at a time of escalating violence that has impacted civilians since South Sudan gained independence in 2011, descending shortly afterwards into civil war.
Since March, tensions have escalated in Upper Nile state, with deadly clashes between Government forces and armed groups. This has uprooted an estimated 80,000 people in three of the most affected counties, the WHO official said.
He added that clashes have also been reported in parts of Western Equatoria, Central Equatoria and Unity states, forcing communities â âmostly women and childrenâ â to flee into neighbouring countries, including 23,000 arrivals in Ethiopia.
Diseases spreading
Back in South Sudan, outbreaks of cholera, malaria, measles and mpox are spreading rapidly, prompting the UN health agency to deploy rapid response teams and coordinate with local partners where possible, amid access restrictions linked to the escalating violence.
âThe alternative, if we do nothing, would be bleak,â the WHO official warned, pointing to cholera cases that may double in just six weeks and measles deaths that could increase by 40 per cent.
Cholera alone has infected more than 55,000 people since September, killing over 1,000, the UN health agency said.
âWar crimeâ condemnation
In a related development, the UN Commission on Human Rights (OHCHR) in South Sudan condemned the bombing as a potential war crime.
âThis was not a tragic accident,â said Yasmin Sooka, Chair of the Commission. âIt was a calculated, unlawful attack on a protected medical facility.â
MSF confirmed the hospital's complete destruction, including its pharmacy and emergency care units. Further aerial bombardments were also reported in New Fangak, raising fears that such attacks are part of a broader military campaign.
The airstrike followed public threats by South Sudanese military forces who demanded the return of seized boats and labelled multiple Nuer-majority counties, including Fangak, as âhostileâ.
âDesignating entire communities as hostile is deeply irresponsible and may amount to collective punishment,â said Commissioner Barney Afako.
Plea for action
The UN Commission has urged immediate investigations into the bombing and warned that repeated violations threaten to derail South Sudanâs fragile peace.
With high-level delegations from the African Union and IGAD now in the capital Juba, calls for renewed dialogue are growing louder. âThe path South Sudan is currently on is perilous,â Ms. Sooka warned. âIf attacks like these continue with impunity, the Peace Agreement risks becoming meaningless.â
In his final appeal, Dr Karamagi emphasised the cost of inaction: âHelp us make sure this doesnât become the moment health â and hope â finally give way.â
SOURCE UN News Centre
@ prnewswire.co.uk
Hol dir den Wissensvorsprung der Profis. Seit 2005 liefert der Börsenbrief trading-notes verlĂ€ssliche Trading-Empfehlungen â dreimal die Woche, direkt in dein Postfach. 100% kostenlos. 100% Expertenwissen. Trage einfach deine E-Mail Adresse ein und verpasse ab heute keine Top-Chance mehr.
Jetzt anmelden.

