Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. GPS News .




AFRICA NEWS
No peace of mind for war-weary South Sudanese
by Staff Writers
Juba, Kenya (AFP) Sept 17, 2012


Staring blankly about his hospital ward, former South Sudanese soldier Ajing Deng has not been the same since getting caught in an enemy bombing raid earlier this year.

He is oblivious to all that goes on and only reacts when a nurse tries to give him another tranquilliser shot.

"Sometimes I sedate patients to stop them from moving," said Juba's military hospital head nurse Philip Oluru.

Deng, 30, suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). He is one of the countless people in South Sudan bearing invisible scars from his country's decades-long civil war with neighbouring Sudan.

Despite hosting one of Africa's longest running and bloodiest conflicts that has killed an estimated 2 million people and displaced many more, the new nation has neither psychiatrists nor health facilities to treat cases like Deng.

Deng was among the troops from the South who marched to Heglig, a disputed oil-rich area between Sudan and South Sudan, in April. With no aerial support, the soldiers from Juba were bombed incessantly by Khartoum.

The ex-combatant is still to recover from the experience.

"The patient started talking to himself, that's why they brought him here. We treated him with typhoid and malaria drugs at first but saw no improvement," Oluru says, adding that Deng was initially presumed to have fever-induced hallucinations.

But then Deng became restless and couldn't sit still, Oluru said.

"We tried to tie him down but it didn't work," he says.

Deng's case is far from unique among South Sudan's battle-weary military, officials say.

"Cases of post-traumatic stress disorder are many within the Sudan's Peoples Liberation Army. We have so many cases... we cannot help," says Peter Ajak Bullen, director of the military hospital.

Mental health patients admitted to the hospital have very few options in terms of treatment: sedation and basic counselling from three hospital staff with some training in psychology.

"This is only a short-term solution. It is not enough. Most of these patients are depressed, suicidal and with violent, murderous traits," Bullen says.

For some of these traumatised patients, suicide has become the only way out.

"Soldiers just shoot themselves," says psychologist Amasi Ibrahim Adam as she wearily makes her rounds through the wards.

Bullen, the hospital director, knows all too well the dangers that mental health disorders pose in the battlefield.

"In the front line... there are many cases of a colleague shooting another. It's just because of depression," he says shaking his head.

"Almost every two weeks there are reports of someone committing suicide or killing someone else. It's a big problem", says South Sudan's military spokesman Philip Aguer.

For civilians suffering from mental health issues here the situation is equally grim.

In a tiny ward in Juba's public hospital, patient Mathew Hakim is handcuffed to the bed. Despite being heavily sedated, he still manages to scream out snatches of garbled sentences about an Israeli invasion.

"We only have 12 beds. Aggressive patients are taken to the sanatorium at Juba prison," says senior medical officer George Wani.

Deputy Health Minister Yatta Yori Lugor says that recognition of mental health problems usually extends only to the most obvious cases, such as the naked people who can be seen wandering and shouting in Juba's streets.

That means that many cases simply go undiagnosed.

With security taking up a large percentage of official expenditure and aid agencies struggling to provide the most basic services, there have been no resources for working out official figures on the number of people affected by PTSD.

The only certainty however, is that the newly formed country is unable to properly care for those afflicted.

"Depressed people don't need these tranquillisers. They don't need prison. They need anti-depressants that we don't have," says medical officer Wani.

.


Related Links
Africa News - Resources, Health, Food






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








AFRICA NEWS
ECOWAS defence ministers meet on Mali, G.Bissau: official
Lagos (AFP) Sept 16, 2012
West African defence and foreign ministers will hold an emergency meeting Monday in the Ivorian capital Abidjan on the political and security crises in Mali and Guinea Bissau, an official statement said. The extraordinary meeting will consider reports presented by the president of the ECOWAS Commission, Desire Kadre Ouedraogo, on the political and security situations in the two countries, th ... read more


AFRICA NEWS
Researchers Use "Banker Plants" to Help Battle Whitefly Pests

Screening technique uncovers five new plant activator compounds

Drought sends US producer prices surging

Turf study to monitor runoff, establish fertilizer management practices

AFRICA NEWS
Memristors based on transparent electronics offer technology of the future

Needle beam could eliminate signal loss in on-chip optics

Samsung starts to build $7bn chip plant in China

Towards computing with water droplets - superhydrophobic droplet logic

AFRICA NEWS
DLR and NASA announce partnership in aeronautics research

Sikorsky explores broader Polish network

Chile in talks to buy Dutch Cougar copters

Northrop Grumman to Supply Navigation System for Embraer's New KC-390 Military Aircraft

AFRICA NEWS
Obama to launch China WTO action on autos

Volvo Cars cuts consultant jobs

Engine for 1,000 mph car to be tested

Drivers, start your batteries: electric cars to race

AFRICA NEWS
US, China trade battle heats up at WTO

People smugglers get rich, Canberra reacts

Australian FM hits back at critics of China investment

Argentine import tariffs hitting exports

AFRICA NEWS
Old Deeds, Witness Trees Offer Glimpse of Pre-settlement Forest in West Virginia

Trouble in paradise: Does nature worship harm the environment?

Forest mortality and climate change: The big picture

Salt Seeds Clouds in the Amazon Rainforest

AFRICA NEWS
More satellite launches planned for upgrading maritime monitoring

Astrium installs new terminal in Mexico to receive SPOT 6 and SPOT 7 imagery

Suomi NPP Captures Smoke Plume Images from Russian and African Fires

Remote Sensing Satellite Sends First Earth Imagery

AFRICA NEWS
Nanoengineers can print 3D microstructures in mere seconds

Improved nanoparticles deliver drugs into brain

Penn Researchers Make First All-optical Nanowire Switch

NTNU researchers commercialize semiconductors grown on graphene




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement