MSF calls for scale-up in water and sanitation programs amidst rising cholera cases in Abyei

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MSF medical staff standing outside one of the tents in the cholera treatment unit in Abyei

The Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is calling for an urgent scale-up in water and sanitation programs amidst rising cholera cases in Abyei. Citing a cholera outbreak in the Abyei Special Administrative Area risks spreading further if water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) conditions are not urgently improved.

Stéphanie Dongmo, MSF Project Coordinator in Abyei, said the risk of spread to Abyei town is high, especially with the return of the rains, extremely poor hygiene conditions, and the continued influx of people arriving from Sudan into an already overcrowded space.

“The situation in Amiet is critical. The patients admitted with cholera to Ameth Bek Hospital in Abyei Town confirm an active outbreak.” Stephanie emphasized.

The MSF project Coordinator adds that, while there are ongoing medical response efforts, the onset of the rainy season poses an immediate and severe threat. Adding that ensuing floods are likely to cut off access, complicate logistical movements for aid, and accelerate the spread of waterborne diseases like cholera.

Dongmo stated that the situation is particularly concerning in informal settlements like Amiet market, where over 50,000 people who fled the war in Sudan live with limited access to safe drinking water and sanitation infrastructure such as latrines.

“Many are forced to defecate in the open due to a lack of latrines, posing further risks of the spread of diseases.” MSF narrated.

“The situation in Amiet is critical. The patients admitted with cholera to Ameth Bek Hospital in Abyei Town confirm an active outbreak. The risk of spread to Abyei town is high, especially with the return of the rains, extremely poor hygiene conditions, and the continued increase in the number of people arriving from Sudan coming into an already overcrowded space.”

MSF has been responding to the crisis, treating patients with symptoms consistent with cholera such as acute watery diarrhea at its 20-bed cholera treatment unit (CTU) set up at Ameth Bek Hospital since 11 April. Between 2 and 28 June, a total of 333 suspected cholera cases were treated at MSF CTU. The last three weeks have seen a significant surge, with 80 patients received between 9 and 15 June, 77 between 16 and 22 June, and 94 between 23 and 28 June treated at the MSF CTU in Abyei.

“MSF calls for the urgent rollout of cholera vaccines and vastly improved water, sanitation, and hygiene programs by all relevant actors in affected areas. Immediate and comprehensive actions, including deploying water trucks to provide clean water, and soap, constructing more latrines, and improving the drainage systems are critical to mitigate the crisis.

Since the start of the outbreak in September 2024, more than 75,000 cases and over 1,300 deaths from cholera have been reported nationwide according to the World Health Organisation by 27 June 2025.