Unifeed
SOUTH SUDAN / HIV DISPLACED
STORY: SOUTH SUDAN / HIV DISPLACED
TRT: 2.47
SOURCE: UNAIDS
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: JUNE 2014, UN HOUSE CAMP, NEAR JUBA, SOUTH SUDAN / JUNE 2014, JUBA, SOUTH SUDAN
JUNE 2014, UN HOUSE CAMP, NEAR JUBA, SOUTH SUDAN
1. Wide shot, UN House Camp
2. Wide shot, UN House Camp
3. Wide shot, Camp shelter
4. Wide shot, Camp shelter
5. Wide shot, people walking beyond Camp fence
6. Wide shot, Nyajime Koang in Camp approaching camera
7. Med shot, Nyajime Koang in Camp approaching camera
8. Close up, Nyajime Koang in Camp approaching camera
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Nyajime Koang, Displaced Person:
"When the crisis broke out, I lost my sister, my husband"
10. Wide shot, entrance to Camp
11. Wide shot, entrance to Camp
12. Wide shot, Camp fence
13. SOUNDBITE (English) Nyajime Koang, Displaced Person:
"The women are raped especially when they are going to town to buy their goods for their business."
14. Med shot, children in Camp
15. Wide shot, women and men in Camp
16. Wide shot, women and men in Camp carrying buckets
17. Wide shot, Camp shelters
18. SOUNDBITE (English) Bothpeter Machak, Community Mobilizer:
"Guys who have money, they can easily deceive women and they give them money to have sex with them."
19. Med shot, interior tent, Bothpeter Machak distributing condoms to group of men
20. Close up, interior tent, Bothpeter Machak demonstrating condoms
21. Wide shot, interior tent group of men
JUNE 2014, JUBA, SOUTH SUDAN
22. Wide shot, exterior Juba Teaching Hospital sign
23. Wide shot, street leading to hospital. Abraham Deng walking to camera
24. Wide shot, exterior Juba Teaching Hospital. Abraham Deng entering hospital
25. Med shot, interior Juba Teaching Hospital. Abraham Deng entering hospital
26. Med shot, consultation room. Abraham Deng and doctor
27. Close up, consultation room. Doctor writing at desk
28. SOUNDBITE (English) Abraham Deng, Displaced Person:
"The health workers are not there, so everybody is running, so no medicine, no treatment."
29. Close up, interior Juba Teaching Hospital. Pharmacy sign
30. Close up, pill bottles
31. Med shot, interior Juba Teaching Hospital Nurse handing Abraham Deng pills
32. Med shot, interior Juba Teaching Hospital. Abraham Deng leaves pharmacy
33. Wide shot, interior Juba Teaching Hospital. Waiting room with patients
34. Wide shot, interior Juba Teaching Hospital. Abraham Deng in waiting room
JUNE 2014, UN HOUSE CAMP, NEAR JUBA, SOUTH SUDAN
35. SOUNDBITE (English) Michel Sidibé, UNAIDS Executive Director:
“Many people living with HIV who were healthy now face a desperate future. We must act urgently to ensure they receive treatment.”
36. Med shot, exterior Camp, group of men and women
37. Wide shot, exterior Camp, group of men and women and children
38. Med shot, exterior Camp, group of children
39. Med shot, exterior Camp. Woman with toddler
40. Med shot, exterior Camp, woman with bucket on head
41. Wide shot, exterior Camp, trees, group of people
42. Wide shot, exterior Camp and trees
43. Wide shot, camp shelter
44. Wide shot, UN House Camp
45. Wide shot, fence
46. Wide shot, fence and barbed wire
47. Wide shot, fence and trucks
48. Med shot, interior Tent, Bothpeter Machak demonstrating condoms
49. Close up, interior Tent, Bothpeter Machak demonstrating condoms
50. Med shot, interior Juba Teaching Hospital Nurse counting pills
51. Med shot, interior Juba Teaching Hospital patients waiting for treatment
52. Med shot, exterior Camp, women arranging buckets
In South Sudan, thousands of people living with HIV have been displaced by the ongoing conflict and struggle to continue their HIV treatment.
A new UNAIDS report finds that emergencies can disrupt care and treatment for people already living with HIV, and the negative impact of HIV on their health and livelihoods can increase the severity of the disasters they experience.
The forcible displacement of people through conflict or disaster is associated with increased food insecurity, the destruction of livelihoods and resulting poverty.
For 15,000 people he UN House Camp, near South Sudan's Capital, Juba, is a safe haven from the ongoing civil war.
For the last 6 months Nyajime Koang has called the Camp home, after fleeing conflict in the Northern State of Unity last December.
SOUNDBITE (English) Nyajime Koang, Displaced Person:
"When the crisis broke out, I lost my sister, my husband"
Beyond this fence lies uncertainty, fear.
SOUNDBITE (English) Nyajime Koang, Displaced Person:
"The women are raped especially when they are going to town to buy their goods for their business."
In this conflict, sexual violence is reportedly a widely used weapon. And there's concern the extreme poverty of many displaced people increases high risk behaviour.
SOUNDBITE (English) Bothpeter Machak, Community Mobilizer:
"Guys who have money, they can easily deceive women and they give them money to have sex with them."
To help prevent the spread of HIV, community mobilizers distribute condoms and provide other programmes.
With the ongoing conflict, the Juba teaching hospital is treating many more people living with HIV.
Abraham Deng came here when his local hospital in the North of the country was burned down.
SOUNDBITE (English) Abraham Deng, Displaced Person:
"The health workers are not there, so everybody is running, so no medicine, no treatment."
An estimated 150,000 people in South Sudan were living with HIV in 2012. Nearly a third are believed to have been displaced by the crisis.
SOUNDBITE (English) Michel Sidibé, UNAIDS Executive Director:
“Many people living with HIV who were healthy now face a desperate future. We must act urgently to ensure they receive treatment.”
There are concerns many displaced people with HIV have had to stop treatment.
UNAIDS is working with its partners to make sure HIV services are part of the overall humanitarian response.
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