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In Pictures: Treating CAR’s starving refugees

Those fleeing violence in the Central African Republic to Cameroon often enter the country severely malnourished.

Raihanatou is three years old but weighs 6.7kgs after spending a month in the bush with her mother and three siblings. During the journey the family ate what they could find, mostly leaves and roots. The little girl was taken to the nutrition centre at Batouri Hospital suffering from diarrhoea and vomiting. She is now recovering.
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By Frederic Noy
Published On 26 May 201426 May 2014

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Growing numbers of refugees from the ongoing violence in the Central African Republic have been arriving in the neighbouring country of Cameroon.

Many of those fleeing enter Cameroon in a dreadful physical condition after having spent weeks or months hiding in the bush, struggling to find food and water and sleeping out in the open, unable to return to their homes.

The most vulnerable of these refugees are children, especially those under the age of five. According to UNHCR, the United Nations’ refugee agency, an estimated 40 percent of children enter Cameroon suffering from malnutrition – and for some, the journey proves to be too much. Together with Doctors Without Borders (Medecins Sans Frontieres), UNHCR has set up a nutrition centre in the eastern Cameroonian town of Batouri.

Two mothers nurse their malnourished children in the hospital(***)s nutrition centre. 
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Nurses at the nutrition centre weigh a severely malnourished child before feeding time. The infant suffered from lack of food during the long journey through the bush.
Ousseini and Hassan, 11-month-old twins, rest in the arms of their mother and grandmother at the nutrition centre supported by UNHCR and Doctors Without Borders. The family walked through the bush for three months before arriving in the border town of Gbiti in Cameroon. During their journey, they ate boiled leaves with occasional bits of beef. The twins are being treated for malnutrition.
Refugee mothers wait with their children for milk distribution in Batouri Hospital(***)s crowded nutrition centre. Milk is distributed every four hours.
Hourriatou mourns the death of her grandson, 18-month-old Djaratou, from malnutrition. Djaratou(***)s father and twin brother were killed in the Central African Republic. The boys(***) mother was injured but is recovering.
An exhausted mother and her baby wait for the milk distribution at the nutrition centre. The centre currently treats about 100 refugee children for severe malnutrition, but more are on the way and the capacity is being increased. 
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A refugee mother in the nutrition centre feeds her baby with a syringe because he refuses to take his milk from a cup.
Even though there are only 12 beds at the hospital(***)s nutrition centre, more than 100 refugee children from the Central African Republic are being treated for severe malnutrition there. The mothers also want to stay near their children.
A UNHCR staff member talks to two refugees from Central African Republic as they wait with their children at the nutrition centre for the first milk distribution of the day.
A mother and child rest at the nutrition centre. 
To deal with the overcrowding, UNHCR has set up tents near Batouri Hospital where mothers can stay with their children who are being treated for severe malnutrition. More refugees arrive every day.
Feeding time at the Batouri Hospital nutrition centre in eastern Cameroon. 


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