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Nomads of war: A headmaster and his family living under a tree

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People were carrying guns near our camp. We feared for our lives. Everybody in the camp started to flee… We had to move.

Since the beginning of April , Simon Akoch, his wife and their six children have been sleeping under a tree in Noon, 25 minutes away from the Nile river by foot. They spend the night on floor mats, one of the few belongings they managed to save while fleeing Melut, the town on the other side of the river. Living outside is nothing new for 41-year-old Simon; he has had to move over and over again.

Since March 2014, this Shilluk family has been on the move, fleeing fighting and ethnic tensions in Upper Nile state, in South Sudan. When the conflict erupted in December 2013, Simon was living in Panyikang County, in the southern part of Upper Nile state. He was the headmaster of Dolieb Hill Combine Primary School, where 1,200 children were studying. “When the war started, my family and I had to flee. We left everything behind us and walked for two months. At night, we would sleep under trees. If we came across a school, we would sneak in and sleep there. We survived on food given by NGOs, some relatives and friends we met along the way. Sometimes, I caught some fish in the river. It took us two months to reach Melut." Melut is in the far north of Upper Nile state.

In Melut, an hour’s drive from the oil fields of Upper Nile, Simon settled in a camp called Hai Soma, dominated by people from the Shilluk tribe. “I spent a lot of energy building a nice tukul (traditional hut made of grass and mud). We were planning to stay.” His plan was cut short in early April when clashes erupted in Upper Nile.
"People were carrying guns near our camp. We feared for our lives. Everybody in the camp started to flee to the other side of the Nile, to Shilluk territory (which had been taken over by the army a few weeks earlier). We could not stay in the camp alone, we had to move.”

In this part of Upper Nile, the river is a natural border between traditional Shilluk land and Dinka land. Simon crossed the Nile in a traditional boat after paying three South Sudanese pounds for each of his seven family members and himself. "We took some pots and rugs with us, and that was it, it was all we could carry.” They then walked 25 minutes to a tiny village called Noon and chose a tree big enough to protect them from the sun during the harsh sunny days. Here, they are surrounded by about 1,600 other Shilluk families living under trees, in the same dire conditions.

“We are going to run out of food very soon. I don't know what we are going to do. The other problem is water. We have to walk 25 minutes to fetch water from the Nile. Old people and the blind can't go. The water is not safe for drinking. (Last week MSF distributed 25 sachets of water purifiers and 30 sachets of plumpy soup per person, which should help the displaced people for about 25 days, before the next distribution is done.) The rainy season is coming. We don't have time to build a tukul. We need some wood, plastic sheets and ropes to build shelters before the rain starts in May. We also don’t have enough blankets.”

Simon is now working as a community health worker for MSF. But he wishes he could go back to his beloved job. "I miss teaching. I miss my colleagues. Some are dead, some are soldiers." Life has taken a different turn than he expected. For now, Noon is his home but he cannot say about tomorrow, he might have to move once again.Back on the other side of the Nile, in Melut, there are now barely any Shilluk left. The few that do remain live in fear, fear of being attacked. The other tribe in town other than the Dinka is the Nuer, most of whom are confined in the UN camp.

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South Sudan
Project Update 15 March 2011