Wednesday, September 26, 2007

October 1st International Day of Older Persons

Benjamin Lokoron is 75 years old. Lying on dirt floor, with some plastic bags and a peace of wood as pillow, he is crippled by rheumatism, and can barely speak or move. The small round hut he lives in is falling down around him, there are gaping holes in the plastic and straw roof; and pools of water surround where he sleeps, remnants of the rain the night before. Unable to get up to use the toilet, and with nobody to take him, his excrement litters the surrounding floor.

“I haven’t eaten for two days”, he tells me. “My daughter in law bought me some pumpkin leaves two days ago, but that was the last I ate. I am too weak now to eat much else. My son often beats me, he gets drunk when he can’t find work…”

Benjamin’s desperate situation is reflective of that of many older people throughout South Sudan whom I have met while working there on photographic assignments for Helpage International. The country is emerging from 23 years of civil war. In the aftermath, the elderly are frequently neglected by their families. Like many, Benjamin lost two of his sons in the fighting. Everybody witnessed atrocities – yet nobody talks about them. The son who remains, and his wife, drink heavily, unable to see a way out of the poverty they have succumbed to.

For a full version of this story visit www.alertnet.org

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Juba - JDO - Photographic Workshop


Photograph c. Atem Elfatih/ JDO

The Joint Donors Office (JDO) in Juba launched a photographic competition in June of this year to mark their first anniversary.
Entitled "Captured Progress" it is aimed at encouraging both professional and non professional photographers from South Sudan, to document the change and progress that is happening throughout the country.
I was asked, along with Steve Morrison, the EPA correspondent from Nairobi, to facilitate the first workshop of the competition.
Of the eight photographers chosen, some worked at the Ministry for Information as photographers, others worked for the Juba Post newspaper, and others were chosen because they showed an interest and photographic ability.
Only four had used a computer before. But by the end of the weekend they had all managed to take and caption a digital photograph (like the one above) of some scene of change in Juba.