In pictures : fighting coronavirus and conflict in Borno state

In pictures : fighting coronavirus and conflict in Borno state

Borno State, Nigeria – COVID-19? Yes, they have heard about it.

Staying at home? They fled their homes because of the fighting.

Social distancing? They would be happy to keep their distance, but how?

They wash their hands as often as they can and hope God protects them from this evil after all they have already been through.

The women at the camp for displaced people in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, sit so close to each other that their bodies touch and the bright colours of their hijabs blur. Several dozens share a few square metres of shade under a hay roof.

Every centimetre of space counts here. Jerrycans and cooking pots are stacked on top of each other and clothes hang from the roof.

Outside, the sun bleaches everything into near-white and the midmorning heat stifles all sound and movement.

The women came from towns and villages in war-torn Borno state, where for the past 10 years there has been a conflict between the military and various armed groups. They have joined some two million displaced people in the northeast of Nigeria. “New arrivals” they call them in Gubio, one of the numerous camps for the displaced in Maiduguri.

Being a “new arrival” means you have to start your life from zero, and you may not have a place to live.

Over the past few weeks, black plastic water containers for handwashing have appeared around the camp, while green and yellow posters share public health messages about the coronavirus.

But for the roughly 250 families who have arrived at the camp in recent months, following much of this guidance is impossible.

‘I am scared to think what will become of my children and me’

In Bakassi, the oldest of Maiduguri’s camps, the majority of the residents have been displaced for several years. There are neat rows of identical tarpaulin huts as far as the eye can see. Every family has a shelter. But many people find social distancing difficult to practise here as well.

Aishatu, a 38-year-old widow, shares a four-by-six metres hut with her 10 children. “I heard that I should avoid crowds,” she says. “It makes me nervous because it is very difficult to do.”

As the number of COVID-19 cases grows, many Nigerians feel the immediate economic impact of the restrictions on movement. For some of the displaced people, who have lost everything, including their social support networks, the blow is extremely hard.

“I am scared to think what will become of my children and me in a time like this,” says Rebeca, a mother of six, who lives in one of the informal settlements for displaced people near Yola, the capital of Adamawa state.

Four years ago, Rebeca and her children fled their home in southern Borno when their village was attacked. Until this day, she does not know if her husband is dead or alive.

To feed her six children, Rebeca helps at farms on the outskirts of Yola, earning 200 Naira ($0.5) a day. But when Yola went into lockdown for two weeks at the beginning of April, the family lost this income.

‘We face constant dilemmas’

While the global pandemic is spreading, the long-standing armed conflict has not loosened its grip on peoples’ lives.

This March, the number of attacks registered by the United Nations was twice that recorded in the same month of the previous two years.

“We face constant dilemmas, as we are responding to the humanitarian emergency, and now there is also a global public health emergency that we have to consider,” explains Stanley Latani, a hospital project manager for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Maiduguri.

To increase the space between the beds and ensure physical distancing between the patients in its surgical ward, which treats war-wounded people, the ICRC had to review its admission criteria and treat as many cases as possible as outpatients. But as the violence continues and wounded people keep arriving, this standard is difficult to maintain.

Before COVID-19 became part of the equation, 35 percent of the health facilities in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states were damaged by the conflict, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). As a result of the lack of access to healthcare, people die of preventable and treatable diseases like malaria, measles and cholera.

The potential effect of the coronavirus, which has overwhelmed some of the best healthcare systems in the world, worries many health specialists.

But healthcare workers in the northeast of Nigeria face an additional threat – being attacked.

“After all, you can take preventive measures against COVID-19,” says Clara Okafor, a nurse in Maiduguri Hospital, “[but] you cannot do anything to protect yourself from a blast.”

Gubio Camp is home to 38,000 people. ALYONA SYNENKO/ICRC
The ICRC is building shelters and toilets for the newly displaced people. ‘Improving living conditions and making sure people have access to water is a key strategy to prevent the spread of COVID-19. So we have to work very fast,’ says Johnson Kwangware, an ICRC engineer. ALYONA SYNENKO/ICRC
Some two million people in the northeast of Nigeria have been displaced as a result of the protracted conflict there. Living conditions in the camps for displaced people make social distancing difficult to practise. ALYONA SYNENKO/ICRC
Aishatu, a widow who lives in Bakassi Camp in Maiduguri, shares a four-by-six metres shelter with her 10 children. ALYONA SYNENKO/ICRC
Two years ago, Aihatu opened a small shop with an ICRC microeconomic grant. As Borno state goes into lockdown to prevent the spread of COVID-19, small businesses are hit hard by the economic impact. ALYONA SYNENKO/ICRC
Rebeca lives in an informal internally displaced people (IDP) settlement on the outskirts of Yola. Her husband has been missing for four years and she works as a daily worker in nearby farms to feed her six children. ALYONA SYNENKO/ICRC
When Yola went into lockdown for two weeks to try to contain the spread of COVID-19, Rebeca could not go out to earn her daily wages. ALYONA SYNENKO/ICRC
To supplement her income, Rebeca collects leftover grains of rice in the fields after the harvest. [Alyona Synenko/ICRC]
The economic impact of lockdowns on displaced people is particularly hard. ALYONA SYNENKO/ICRC
Five people were in a critical condition and had to be rushed into the operating theatre on the same day. ALYONA SYNENKO/ICRC
The ICRC has had to review admission criteria to ensure enough distance between the beds in its surgical ward. But as more wounded people keep arriving, this standard is difficult to maintain. ALYONA SYNENKO/ICRC
Before COVID-19 became part of the equation, 35 percent of health facilities in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states were damaged as the result of the continuing armed conflict. ALYONA SYNENKO/ICRC
Rifcatu Augustine, a community healthcare worker in Mayo Beloa Clinic, Adamawa state. More than 10 years of armed conflict have taken a heavy toll on the region’s healthcare system. ALYONA SYNENKO/ICRC

Source: Al Jazeera 

 

 

 

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