Four Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) from the
recent herdsmen attacks in some parts of Plateau State have died in camp.
70-year-old Dachollom Bature died last Sunday at
Riyom Mini Depot camp after battling an undisclosed ailment. The camp allegedly
occupies 6,000 persons; 90 per cent of who are women and children, facing poor
sanitary conditions.
Although Bature allegedly took ill before getting
to the camp, his health was believed to have degenerated in the camp due to
inadequate medical care, the camp being one of the most neglected.
The following day, which was July 2, 2018, two
persons died in the same camp in Riyom in an accident involving two motorcycles
which had a head-on collision.
A camp official, Mrs. Jane Tok, reported on Wednesday that the
two were in a hurry to find means of survival for their families in the camp.
She said one was returning from where he had gone to hustle for some money to
provide for his family, while the other was going out for the same purpose when
their motorcycles had head-on collision very close to the camp.
Both Samson Yohanna, 33, and Gabriel Markus, 35,
died instantly, Tok disclosed.
Same day, an 82-year-old woman reportedly slumped
and died at an IDP camp in Ban, Heipang, Barkin Ladi council area after a
surveillance helicopter flew over the camp with a loud noise.
The deceased, Nandis Ishaku, displaced by the
crisis from Nghar village reportedly collapsed and died at the loud sound of
the helicopter. She was however believed to be hypertensive and lacked medical
care while in the camp.
Most of the IDP camps in the state are allegedly
faced with the worse sanitary, medical and humanitarian conditions for human
habitation.
The situation, a local non-governmental organisation,
Women and Children in Community Development Initiative in Nigeria (WOCCI),
fears could lead to severe disease outbreaks if not checked.
Managing Director of the NGO, Mrs. Edwina Mang,
particularly warned on the health of women and children who constitute the
larger populations in most camps.
Mang said: “You could see that they don't have good
sanitation facilities, safe drinking water or even good places to sleep. This
is already a threat to human health, especially for the children who are most
likely to play around carelessly and use their hands to eat without washing.
Diarrhea is eminent!”
Delivering some humanitarian aids to three camps, Geosciences
Camp at Angle-D, Mang requested the state and local governments to quickly
upgrade the camps to forestall any “medical crisis.”
Already, three diarrhea cases have been reported in
the Riyom Mini Depot camp.
Although the Riyom Local Government Area Health
Department has isolated the affected children for treatment, there are other
medical conditions that the IDPs have to battle with.
Mang therefore appealed for the establishment of a
clinic aside the provision of water and sanitation facilities for all the IDP
camps.
Red Cross last Monday had disclosed that there are
nearly 8,000 IDPs in just five camps, and about 15 camps exist across the three
council areas affected by the recent crisis in the state.
According to the Red Cross report, all the camps it
visited are practicing open defecation due to lack of toilet facilities, except
only one. “This is a great challenge as this is likely to result to severe diarrhea,
which if not properly managed can result to cholera.”
No comments:
Post a Comment