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Sunday, 08 September 2024
Post Links:
Please find below Dr Tedros opening remarks at a joint press conference held today in Port Sudan and the recording of the press conference.
WHO Director-General’s opening remarks at press conference in Port Sudan – 8 September 2024
[https://www.who.int/director-general/speeches/detail/who-director-general-s-opening-remarks-at-press-conference-in-port-sudan—9-september-2024]
8 September 2024
Salam aleikum wa rahmatAllah wa barakatuh,
Thank you Minister for extending a warm welcome to Sudan, and spending so much time these past two days updating me in person on the many challenges and actions being taken to respond to Sudan’s severe humanitarian crisis.
I have lost count the number of times I have been to Sudan, as a government minister, and now as Director-General of the World Health Organization. Sudan is like my home. I feel I belong here. I have long respected the generosity, courage and kindness of its people.
So, this is why the situation in Sudan today saddens me very much.
But I am also sad to see the crisis is not getting the attention it deserves from the international community.
Yesterday, I visited a WHO-supported pediatric facility in Port Sudan, which provides life-saving care for infants suffering from acute malnutrition. I was shaken by the state of many of the tiny, wasted children, and stunned by the harrowing accounts of their mothers who have been displaced multiple times due to the insecurity, thankful at least to find refuge at this clinic.
Today I visited the Shagya site where internally displaced people from various parts of the country gather and can access essential primary health care services, being delivered at another WHO-supported health facility.
Sudanese are suffering through a perfect storm of crises:
over 500 days of conflict;the largest level of displacement in the world;famine in some parts, and risk of this in others. 25.6 million people – over half of Sudan’s population – are expected to face high levels of acute food insecurity;disasters including flooding leading to dams bursting;disease outbreaks, including cholera, malaria, dengue and measles, with the risk of mpox;multiple reported incidents of conflict-related sexual violence; andthe near collapse of much of the country’s health system – an estimated 70-80% of the health facilities not fully functioning across the country.
WHO and our partners have been raising the alert on Sudan since the conflict began, and working to meet some of the challenges.
But speak to many people in Sudan today and they will tell you that the crisis is falling on deaf ears around the world.
The international community has seemingly forgotten about Sudan, and is paying little heed to the conflict tearing it apart, with repercussions in the region.
That is why I have come to Sudan. I am here, with my sister Dr Hanan Balkhy, WHO Eastern Mediterranean Regional Director, to meet with the wide range of partners involved in the response, and to call for urgent and scaled up action to provide more resources, more access to humanitarian aid, and more security to health workers and the patients they serve.
According to available data, Sudan’s conflict has so far killed more than 20 000 people, which is an underestimate, displaced over 10 million people inside the country, and forced another 2 million to flee to neighbouring countries. This is the largest internal displacement of people in the world today.
The scale of the emergency is shocking, as is the insufficient action being taken to curtail the conflict, and respond to the suffering it is causing.
This is manifesting itself in other ways, including insufficient levels of funding, far too many attacks on healthcare with the count already past 100, and attacks on other humanitarians and the people they serve, and the inability to secure unfettered cross border and cross line access for humanitarian relief.
The conflict has left some 25 million people — more than half of the country’s population — in dire need of humanitarian aid.
Of these, 14.7 million require urgent assistance for a range of life-saving support, for which the humanitarian sector has requested 2.7 billion US dollars, which is less than half funded.
But we must focus on all people in need – all 25 million – and this means additional resources are required to meet their needs.
We are calling on the world to wake up and help Sudan out of the nightmare it is living through.
What do we need?
We need an immediate ceasefire, leading to a lasting political solution. The best medicine is peace.We need to protect health facilities, health workers and patients – health should not be targeted.We need sustained access to deliver supplies and aid.We need to scale up disease surveillance; in some states, we are blind to what is happening due to the insecurity on the ground.We need to scale up vaccination coverage against cholera, polio, measles and other diseases spreading in affected areas.And we need a massive increase in finances from the international community to scale up the response.
If we do this, we will:
save millions of lives, predominantly children and women, who are today living on the edge of survival;and we will provide the much-needed calm that all people desperately need and deserve;and deliver hope for this proud country.
We must not fail the people of Sudan.
END:
——–
Link to the recording:
[https://who.canto.global/b/HN537]
Best regards
WHO Media Team
MEDIA ADVISORY
INVITATION TO MEDIA
Joint press conference on the Sudan humanitarian crisis
WHAT:
WHO Director-General Dr Tedros is undertaking a mission to Sudan to assess first hand the health impacts of the conflict-driven humanitarian crisis, which has been exacerbated by extensive damage and loss of life caused by heavy rains and flooding. During his time in Sudan, Dr Tedros has visited health facilities serving displaced Sudanese, met with national health authorities and United Nations partners.
WHEN: Sunday 8 September at 9.30am CEST
WHERE: Port Sudan, Sudan (and streamed here) by the hosting country: [https://www.facebook.com/AlhakimNewss] .
Please note we will update you it it can also be watched on WHO Social Media platforms.
We aim also to send the recording of this joint press conference afterwards.
WHO:
Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General;
Dr Haitham Mohamed Ibrahim Awadallah, Federal Minister of Health, Sudan;
Dr Hanan Balkhy, WHO Eastern Mediterranean Regional Director.
Dr Shible Sahbani, WHO Representative to Sudan
Media contacts:
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