Medical care for families in South Sudan
Midwife Joan Laker uses a Pinard horn as she performs a prenatal examination of a woman in Nimule, South Sudan, during a mobile clinic run by Caritas of the Diocese of Torit.
The mobile clinic was launched in January 2014 shortly after war broke out within South Sudan, and thousands of families arrived in this area, near the country's border with Uganda, from Bor, in Jonglei State.
Yet many have not been warmly welcomed to this region of Eastern Equatoria State, where two earlier waves of displaced people in the 1980s and 1990s left relations tense between the newcomers, who are Dinka, and the largely Ma'adi residents around the city of Nimule.
The Caritas mobile clinic provides medical care--often under a tree--both to displaced families as well as to poor residents of the host communities.
Photo by Paul Jeffrey for Caritas Internationalis
Medical care for families in South Sudan
Midwife Joan Laker uses a Pinard horn as she performs a prenatal examination of a woman in Nimule, South Sudan, during a mobile clinic run by Caritas of the Diocese of Torit.
The mobile clinic was launched in January 2014 shortly after war broke out within South Sudan, and thousands of families arrived in this area, near the country's border with Uganda, from Bor, in Jonglei State.
Yet many have not been warmly welcomed to this region of Eastern Equatoria State, where two earlier waves of displaced people in the 1980s and 1990s left relations tense between the newcomers, who are Dinka, and the largely Ma'adi residents around the city of Nimule.
The Caritas mobile clinic provides medical care--often under a tree--both to displaced families as well as to poor residents of the host communities.
Photo by Paul Jeffrey for Caritas Internationalis