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Article

4 Jul 2018

Author:
Joseph Oduha, The EastAfrican (Kenya)

So. Sudan: Locals express concern over health risks from oil-related pollution; urge govt. to intervene

"Concern over oil pollution in South Sudan"

The residents of South Sudan oil-rich north want the government to address the rise in pollution of their water sources. Dr James Okuk said on behalf of the residents that the Juba authorities were sacrificing the rights of the citizens at the altar of the oil gains. The environmental contamination, Dr Okuk said, was a serious violation of the human rights of the people living around the oilfields by both the government of South Sudan and the companies extracting the oil. “If pollution is displacing people and causing suffering, then it is a human rights violation for which both the government and companies bear responsibility,” he said...

Mr Nyuot Gatwich, from Bentiu town testified that the contamination had caused a myriad illnesses among the people. He claimed that some women had experienced pregnancy complications, with some giving birth to deformed babies. “People are suffering in Thar Jath. The President of South Sudan should come and see how people are living,” said Mr Gatwich, 24. A German lobby group, Sign of Hope, last April released a report on oil pollution in South Sudan; saying more than 600,000 people were at a high risk of painful early and horrible deaths in the oil-producing areas.  Mr Bior Bior of the Institute for Environmental Health corroborated the findings. “Human beings and animals continue to drink from the contaminated water sources. It is evident that people and their animals that are exposed to these contaminations are made risk,” Mr Bior Bior of the Institute for Environmental Health said.