JUBA, Mar 31 (Jonglei Times)-Hope for the village of Maar is pinned on the skies.
The scorched South Sudan village has not had food for six months.
Jubilant laborers hired for the day rushed to help sort the supplies dropped by the Red Cross.
It’s too dangerous to bring food to Maar by road, so air drops are the only way to get some kind of nutrition to this community.
Food is the latest weapon in this civil war, where aid convoys are regularly ambushed by warring militias.
Despite
months of waiting, villagers line up patiently to get their food,
including Nyaruach Chuol. The 110-pound bag of sorghum and beans weighs
about the same as she does.
The
food will help feed her family of 10, now facing a cholera outbreak on
top of the food shortages. Her father Chuol Jotijiok is wasting away.
“I have a sore stomach. There is nothing to eat but leaves and fruit. Sometimes I have nothing,” he said.
But not everyone gets help.
Ujiwami Beil Bol is new to the region and not registered with the Red Cross. She fled the fierce fighting 300 miles away.
“We
were sleeping and then the war came to us,” Bol said. “I saw the
soldiers shoot my children and burn my house to the ground.”
Heavily pregnant, she fled with her two surviving children, walking
for 24 days to find safety. Amazingly, she gave birth to a healthy boy
in the bush along the way.
But Bol’s gamble didn’t work; There is no extra food.
“I don’t know anyone here. I just sit under a tree and hope people will help me,” she said.
Everyone here already has too many hungry stomachs to fill. There just isn’t room for one more.
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