
Mental health clinics in violence-prone South Sudan are rare, endangered
'I wanted to take my children and jump in the river," she said while cradling a baby outside a room with cracked mud walls where she now stays.
But she's made a remarkable recovery months later, thanks to the support of well-wishers and a mental health clinic nearby where she's received counselling since April.
She told The Associated Press that her suicidal thoughts are now gone after months of psycho-social therapy, even though she still struggles to feed her children and can't afford to keep them in school.
The specialized clinic in her hometown of Mundri, in South Sudan' s Western Equatoria state, is a rare and endangered facility in a country desperate for more such services. Now that the program's funding from Italian and Greek sources is about to end and its future is unclear.
The clinic is in one of eight locations chosen for a project that aimed to provide mental health services for the first time to over 20,000 people across this East African country. Launched in late 2022, it proved a lifeline for patients like Falatiya in a country where mental health services are almost non-existent in the government-run health system.
Implemented by a group of charities led by Amref Health Africa, the program has partnered with government health centres, Catholic parishes, local radio stations.
Across South Sudan, there has been massive displacement of people in the civil war that began in 2013 when government troops loyal to President Salva Kiir fought those loyal to Vice President Riek Machar.
The eruption of fighting was a major setback for the world's newest country, which became a major refugee-producing nation just over two years after independence from Sudan. Although a peace deal was reached in 2018, the resumption of hostilities since January led the UN to warn of a possible 'relapse into large scale conflict." The violence persists even today, with Machar under house arrest and government forces continuing with a campaign to weaken his ability to wage war. And poverty — over 90 per cent of the country's people live on less than USD 2.15 per day, according to the World Bank — is rampant in many areas, adding to the mental health pressures many people face, according to experts.
In a country heavily dependent on charity to keep the health sector running, access to mental health services lags far behind. The country has the fourth-highest suicide rate in Africa and is ranked thirteenth globally, World Health Organization figures show.
In South Sudan, suicide affects mostly the internally displaced, fuelled by confinement and pressures related to poverty, idleness, armed conflict, and gender-based violence, according to the International Organisation for Migration.
'Mental health issues are a huge obstacle to the development of South Sudan," said Jacopo Rovarini, an official with Amref Health Africa.
More than a third of those screened by the Amref project 'show signs of either psychological distress or mental health disorders," he said. 'So the burden for the individuals, their families and their communities is huge in this country, and it has gone quite unaddressed so far." Last month, authorities in Juba raised an alarm after 12 cases of suicide were reported in just a week in the South Sudan capital. There were no more details on those cases.
Dr. Atong Ayuel Longar, one of South Sudan's very few psychiatrists and the leader of the mental health department at the health ministry, said a pervasive sense of 'uncertainty is what affects the population the most" amid the constant threat of war.
'Because you can't plan for tomorrow," she said. 'Do we need to evacuate? People will be like, No, no, no, there's no war.' Yet you don't feel that sense of peace around you. Things are getting tough." In Mundri, the AP visited several mental health facilities in June and spoke to many patients, including women who have recently lost relatives in South Sudan's conflict. In 2015, the Mundri area was ravaged by fighting between opposition forces and government troops, leading to widespread displacement, looting and sexual violence.
Ten years later, many have not recovered from this episode and fear similar fighting could resume there.(AP) RD RD
(This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed - PTI) view comments
First Published:
August 11, 2025, 13:00 IST
News agency-feeds Mental health clinics in violence-prone South Sudan are rare, endangered
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