US nurse on migrant rescue ship reunited with Darfur boy she saved

At the height of Sudan's Darfur war in 2004 - then the world's worst conflict - an American nurse tended to an injured baby. Fifteen years later, she was miraculously reunited with him on a migrant rescue ship working in the Mediterranean.

A Sudanese internally displaced civilian suffers from a bullet wound to his chest after being shot  by Janjaweed militia.

A Sudanese internally displaced civilian suffers from a bullet wound to his chest after being shot by Janjaweed militia. Source: EPA

The Ocean Viking, run by charities MSF and SOS Mediterranee, had rescued four boats of migrants off the Libyan coast between August 9 and 12. One of the 356 migrants was a 17-year-old boy named Omar whom MSF nurse Mary Jo Frawley had healed as a toddler.

"I remember this baby. His mother brought him. He was wounded in the right leg and needed medical attention when the attacks happened. Everybody had to run away to the mountains. They were difficult times," she said.
The camp is home to thousands of Sudanese who have fled their towns and villages due to fighting and unrest.
Women sit under the shade of a large tree on a wadi (dry riverbed) at a makeshift camp for internally displaced people near Seleah village in Sudan. Source: AP
Omar, who was two at the time, does not remember the encounter but said "my mother told me" about it. He still has a scar running down his calf. Omar had been wounded in bombing during the deadly conflict that broke out more than 15 years ago in Sudan when ethnic African rebels took up arms against Khartoum, which they accused of marginalizing the remote region.

Khartoum armed Arab pastoralists to quash the rebellion, leading to massacres. The United Nations estimates that at least 300,000 people were killed in the conflict. In another coincidence, Frawley recognized 22-year-old migrant Abdurahman, whose father had saved her life before being killed by the dreaded Janjawid militia which is accused of war crimes. "We operated a small surgical unit with 10 to 12 people in the middle of Mujaheria, right in the middle of nowhere," she recounted.
 A file picture dated  24 October 2004 of Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) soldiers on patrol outside the town of Ellayeet in North Darfur, Sudan.
A file picture dated 24 October 2004 of Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) soldiers on patrol outside the town of Ellayeet in North Darfur, Sudan. Source: EPA
"One day I was informed by the community that I needed to leave because of the danger. It was (Abdurahman's) father who came to tell us that we had to leave as well and (that) the government wanted to kick us out. It was difficult to leave behind a community and a hospital that served so many people," said the nurse, who witnessed several conflicts over two decades in Africa.

"We frequently had 40, 50 people coming at night. We had to leave... they really saved my life telling me to run.... Once we were gone, my hope was to get the privilege to give back and help you. Your family did it for me, it's my duty to do it for you. I am grateful," she said.
A file photograph dated 21 October 2004 showing a sick Sudanese Internally Displaced woman sitting outside her shelter in Muhajiriyah IDP camp, Darfur, Sudan.
A file photograph dated 21 October 2004 showing a sick Sudanese Internally Displaced woman sitting outside her shelter in Muhajiriyah IDP camp, Darfur, Sudan. Source: EPA FILES

'Circle of love'

"This is the circle of love we can share."


Abdurhaman, who was seven at the time, said that shortly after his father's warning to Frawley, the Janjawid stormed his village early in the morning.

He saw his father being killed and then managed to flee with his mother.

"I was the youngest of my brothers and sisters," he said. "Many people were killed. To this day we don't have any news of my elder brother."

Abdurahman and his mother took shelter in Nyala, one of the main cities of Darfur which hosted several camps for the war displaced.
On the Ocean Viking, both Omar and Abdurahman recognized the peanut-based MSF food rations that they had also received in camps in Darfur.

With Frawley, they remembered the terrifying moments before the bombings when the planes could be heard approaching. "Brrrrrr," they said in unison, imitating the sound.

Frawley said the bombardments often backed up Janjawid raids.

But the nightmare did not end there for Abdurahman and Omar, who faced repeated challenges in their quest to reach Europe and start a new life.


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By AFP-SBS
Source: AFP, SBS


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