South Sudan: “There is nothing left,” MSF medic says after hospital bombing
MSF-supported hospital destroyed in airstrike as medical care vanishes
“I didn’t think that this hospital was going to be bombed,” says David Charo Kahindi, medical coordinator with Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in South Sudan, who was in Old Fangak on May 3 when the MSF-supported hospital was bombed. He was part of the team extinguishing the fire and treating and evacuating wounded patients.
I had no words to explain to the patients that the hospital was no longer safe for them.
I was woken by the bombing at around 4:50 a.m. on Saturday morning. I could hear the helicopters flying overhead and people screaming all around us. Every time I heard the helicopters, I was afraid for my life and the life of the community and the patients and the staff. The bombing continued for about an hour. All I could hear was the guns firing and people screaming.
When it finally went quiet, I immediately took the boat to get to the hospital. I met our watchman at the gate and saw it was completely shattered. There were bullets everywhere. As I walked into the compound, I saw pieces of weaponry that had exploded.

When I reached the pharmacy, it was on fire. Everyone, all the team and the community, were trying to fetch water with buckets to put it out. It was no easy task. Our fuel tanks were a few metres away from the pharmacy, so we were afraid if the fire continued, this fuel was going to explode and cause another disaster on top of the disaster we were already dealing with.
At first, I thought there was a chance we could save some of the medications inside, but it quickly became clear that whoever bombed the hospital wanted this pharmacy and all the medications inside it to be completely burned. It took us about five hours before we could completely put it out.
Urgency to stop bleeding, stabilize patients for evacuation
Then, I walked into the hospital. First, I went to the men’s ward where there had been two patients the night before. When I entered the ward, there was no one there but there were bullet holes on the ground and there was blood on the floor. I was worried. I didn’t know what had happened or where the patients had gone. It was the same in the female ward as well.
Next, I reached the emergency room, where the team was busy stabilizing and treating patients that had just arrived from the town. There were 20 in total, and some of them were in a very, very critical condition and we urgently needed to stop the bleeding. Some of them had been shot in the head, in the chest, in the abdomen. We tried to do everything we could, but there were no supplies other than what had been on the ward before the attack. What we had was definitely not enough.
“I am completely heartbroken by what has happened. The hospital had been there for more than 10 years and was a lifeline to over 100,000 people.”
David Charo Kahindi, MSF medical coordinator in South Sudan
Once we had stabilized the patients, we evacuated them by speedboat to a village about an hour away that we considered to be safer. Most of the patients were women. There were also children only 15 years old that were wounded. In this village, there was nothing but a tent. We were in the middle of nowhere. We kept the patients in the tent there and gave them what medication we had been able to bring with us. The next day, they were evacuated by air to a hospital in Akobo for further treatment.
However, around 10,000 people had fled to the same location and by morning it was clear we didn’t have enough supplies to run a health facility that would be able to provide this many people with any type of medical care. We called for help from the team in Juba and with the support of the UN we were able to airlift 350 kilograms of medical supplies to run a health post from this tent. We hope we don’t receive any more wounded, but we continue to receive information there is ongoing bombing in other areas.
I am completely heartbroken by what has happened. The hospital had been there for more than 10 years and was a lifeline to over 100,000 people in the area. Hospitals should never be the targets and I utterly condemn this bombing. It was a 35-bed hospital that had an outpatient department, inpatient wards, maternity – and we were able to refer severe cases to higher-level facilities. Now, there is nothing left.
