by MARIELLE SMITH
As my Ethiopian Airlines plane touches down amidst a swarm of military and United Nations choppers, I nervously pull my hands through my hair at the thought of the freshly printed tourist visa tucked in my passport. The army controls the main airport here – boys in dark sunglasses clutch almost comically oversized AK47s, and bullet holes scatter the walls and windows.
South Sudan is no place for tourists. Yet here I am, drawn back to this continent yet again, looking for answers to questions about my own life and about the work my Dad had been doing here for years.
I’m heading to Melut, in Upper Nile State. It’s the wet season now, so the roads have been closed. The only way up north is aboard a tin boat with a deeply unreliable outboard motor (later, I’d learn how to bail water from said sinking boat with half cut-open jerry cans, shivering and holding in my tears).
On board, we pass the United Nations compound – their 4WDs, speedboats, barges and cargo are a shrine on the side of the White Nile – they mean business. I feel immediately comforted. Help is here now. The people are safe.
But mere moments later a barge carrying hundreds of people squeezed between cargo and animals drifts sluggishly past. These, I’m told, are refugees, who with Independence have been forced out of their homes and sent South. I don’t think this boat can keep afloat much longer. And I know that when it finally stops, these people have no home to go to.
Welcome to the new South Sudan. Protection from the blood and the burning and the horror of war to your right; a haunting question mark over your future to your left.
Top Comments
To think mankind could fix this yet we don't!
Marielle, your writing is beautiful and moving. I admire you for the volunteer work you have done in South Sudan and elsewhere on the African continent. People like you put yourselves at risk to help humanity prosper. I was interested that it is groups of women (though they have little education) who are the practical ones - meeting and planning to start businesses and rebuild their families' lives. Does the responsibility for this lie with them as the men are involved / have died in the war? How compassionate they are to ask questions about Australian women's circumstances. To show concern for US when they are dealing with poverty, homelessness, starvation etc is very humanitarian. Let's show support to the aid agencies and volunteers that work in Africa to assist people in dire circumstances rather than make cynical remarks about instances of misdirected aid.