Save the Children suspends work in Agok, relocates staff

Save the Children has relocated three staff from Agok in the Abyei Administrative Area, a contested territory between Sudan and South Sudan, following a violent attack on Friday 11 February, the aid agency said in a press release on Tuesday evening.

Save the Children has relocated three staff from Agok in the Abyei Administrative Area, a contested territory between Sudan and South Sudan, following a violent attack on Friday 11 February, the aid agency said in a press release on Tuesday evening.

During the attack, gunmen stormed the town and torched homes and shops, forcing much of the local population to flee to other parts of Abyei.

“The degree of violence and damage has led to Save the Children suspending all programs in the town – including essential health, food, education, and child protection programs,” the statement read.

Mohamed Dahir, Save the Children’s Interim Country Director in South Sudan, said the aid agency could not work in an area where their staff and their families feared for their lives.  

“We cannot perform our essential, life-saving work in Agok if our staff and their families fear for their lives,” Dahir said. “The programs we have suspended support children battling malnutrition; provide vaccines and healthcare to babies and mothers; and provide security and protection to South Sudan’s most vulnerable children. One day of program suspension can be the difference between life and death for a child.”

 He added: “It is critical that both parties to this conflict provide unimpeded humanitarian access and assurances of safety to humanitarian staff so that we can resume our projects and prevent further suffering.”

Dahir strongly urged the local authority to protect civilians and ensure that humanitarian agencies like Save the Children can continue to deliver services to children and families.

 Save the Children is operating a range of programs in the Abyei Administrative Area, including a health and nutrition project with support from the European Union (ECHO).  The program targets population of about 76,000 people, providing free lifesaving primary healthcare services in addition to nutrition, food security, and livelihoods programs.

Save the Children is also working to strengthen the capacity of the local health system to prevent, detect, and respond to outbreaks of common a range of endemic diseases.

Abyei authorities over the weekend said the four people were killed and six others wounded during an attack in the Anet area/ Agok Town of Rumamer County by suspected armed youth from Twic County of Warrap State, on Thursday evening.