MSF continues to provide healthcare services in our other projects in Upper Nile state, including in Malakal and Renk counties
GENEVA, Switzerland, June 17, 2025/APO Group/ --
- After two violence incidents earlier this year, MSF has been forced to close our hospital in Ulang county, South Sudan, and end our support to 13 community-based health facilities.
- This has left 150,000 people with less access to healthcare, in an area where MSF's maternal services are a lifeline.
- All parties to conflict in South Sudan must adhere to international humanitarian law, cease such indiscriminate attacks, and ensure the protection of medical facilities, health workers, and patients.
People in remote areas of Upper Nile state in South Sudan are suffering from a lack of access to healthcare, since attacks on medical boats and armed looting in medical facilities since the beginning of the year have forced Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) to close our hospital and end our support to 13 community-based healthcare facilities in Ulang county. The closure of MSF’s hospital has left an area of more than 200km from the Ethiopian border to Malakal town without any functional specialised healthcare facility. MSF calls on all parties to adhere to international humanitarian law, cease such indiscriminate attacks, and ensure the protection of medical facilities, health workers, and patients.
Since February 2025, South Sudan has experienced its worst spike in violence since the 2018 peace deal. Fighting between government forces and armed youth militias has escalated across multiple states, including Upper Nile, Jonglei, Unity, and Central Equatoria. This has led to mass displacement, widespread civilian casualties, and a total collapse of already fragile public services.
Despite these closures, MSF remains dedicated to supporting the healthcare needs of displaced and vulnerable people in Ulang and Nasir counties. We have a mobile emergency team assessing needs who are prepared to provide short-term healthcare services wherever security conditions and access allow. MSF continues to provide healthcare services in our other projects in Upper Nile state, including in Malakal and Renk counties.
An escalating trend of violence against healthcare
In January 2025, MSF faced an attack by unidentified gunmen near Nasir, shooting at our boats as they returned from delivering medical supplies to Nasir County hospital. This attack forced us to suspend all outreach activities in Nasir and Ulang counties, which included medical referrals by boat along the Sobat River that allowed women to deliver their babies safely.
In April 2025, armed individuals forced their way into the hospital in Ulang where they threatened staff and patients and looted the hospital so extensively that MSF no longer had the necessary resources to continue operations safely and effectively.
“They took everything: medical equipment, laptops, patients’ beds and mattresses from the wards, and approximately nine months' worth of medical supplies, including two planeloads of surgical kits and drugs delivered just the week before. Whatever they could not carry, they destroyed,” says Zakaria Mwatia, MSF head of mission for South Sudan.
Within a month, another MSF hospital was bombed in Old Fangak, a town in the neighbouring Jonglei state, leaving the facility completely non-functional. This is part of a worrying rise in attacks on healthcare facilities in South Sudan.
Local communities depended on MSF for prenatal care
“During my third pregnancy, I decided to come to the hospital well in advance before my delivery. I lost my two first children because I did not make it to the hospital on time,” says Nyapual Jok, a young mother from the outskirts of Ulang county.
Nyapual had been transported to the hospital by one of MSF’s boat ambulances, since she lives in a remote village far away from Ulang hospital. Ulang, a vast flood-prone area, is characterised by spotted remote villages which often suffer severe mobility restrictions during the rainy seasons. MSF ran boat transportation services to ensure access to healthcare to mothers like Nyapual.
“It’s very hard to access healthcare here. If we had a hospital closer during my previous deliveries, maybe my children would be alive today,” adds Nyapual.
Nyapual shared her story in November 2024, only two months before the attack on the same boats which helped her deliver her baby safely.
Facility closures create gaps that are difficult to fill
The attacks’ effect of stopping medical referrals by boat has had fatal consequences for the people living in remote areas in the region. People in Ulang and Nasir counties had to wait for days, sometimes even weeks, to get a boat to take them to Ulang hospital. In desperate situations, they would walk for days through a muddy landscape – a land that is nearly impossible to cross on foot during rainy season.
“She was in labour when she suffered birth complications – she had to get to a hospital as soon as possible,” says Veronica Nyakuoth, an MSF midwife at the Ulang hospital, about a patient she attended to in the maternity ward. “Normally, MSF mobile teams would have been able to pick her up by boat, but since that service was cut off, instead she had to wait two days for a private boat to take her. When she finally made it to Ulang hospital, it was too late: the team could not find a heartbeat from the twins she was carrying in her womb.”
150,000 people cut off from care
With the closure of the hospital and the withdrawal of support to the decentralised facilities including transportation of patients, more than 150,000 people will now face even more difficulties accessing healthcare in Ulang county and more might face the tragic fate that Veronica’s patient had to suffer. Over 800 patients with chronic illnesses such as HIV, tuberculosis, and others have lost access to treatment due to the closure of MSF services in the area.
“We need a hospital nearby that can help mothers and children. Without it, many will suffer and lose their lives,” says Nyapual.
MSF in Ulang
Since 2018, MSF had been providing vital health services in Ulang including trauma, maternal and paediatric care. The teams also supported 13 facilities to offer essential healthcare services. Over the past seven years, MSF teams carried out more than 139,730 outpatient consultations, admitted 19,350 patients, treated 32,966 cases of malaria, and assisted 2,685 deliveries, among other essential services. During this time, MSF also provided support to Nasir County hospital and responded to multiple emergencies and disease outbreaks.
Nyapual’s story, along with those of many others, serves as a stark reminder that healthcare is a fundamental right and should never be a target. The consequences of attacks to healthcare are more than the damage to a building; it’s the loss of hope, safety, and the chance for a healthier future.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Médecins sans frontières (MSF).
Rather than attribute this to Ethiopia's sensittivity to its image, I would argue that it is an attempt to quell potential internal conflict. An admission of the food crisis would give momentum to opposition parties ahead of the 2010 General Elections. This would have the effect of galvanizing the opposition and the emergence of a self-conscious oppressed groups (i.e the OLF or political parties would mobilize support within the different ethnic regions pointing to the lack of action or oppressive measure of Zenawi).
Moreover, it would make sense for Ethiopia to deny the food crisis on the basis that its "sensitive to images showing its people as starving", when they could use the food crisis to ask for more donor funds, to add to the more than a billion dollars they receive annual.
On the whole, I find the article lacks depth and is based on the assumption that Ethiopia is denying the existence of a food crisis solely for the sake of its global image.
Sorry, the third word in the second paragraph should be -wouldn't.
Whatever the reason, the indisputable fact about Ethiopia is that the country is synonymous with famine and has repeatedly failed to feed itself.
From Haile Selassie of late 1960s and early 1970s to Mingistu Haile Mariam of the 1970s and 1980s and now TPLF’s Meles Zenawi, all Ethiopian rulers have miserably failed to safeguard the dignity of their people.
It is predictably familiar for aid agencies and others to warn the world that yet again Ethiopians will die in their millions if the life saving grain does not arrive in time. Meles receives billions of dollars in aid but is unable to break the cycle.
What is unique to Ethiopia is the fact that no other African country, indeed the world, including those who nature has not been kind to and have less natural resources suffers from famine as Ethiopia does and are not only able to feed their people but some never had famine or asked for food aid. Even the chaotic Somalia who not only endured two decades without central government but have not known a day without fighting and unnecessary deaths somehow fairs better than Ethiopia.