Joanne Offer
Joanne Offer is regional media manager in the Horn and East Africa with the International Rescue Committee (IRC). She has worked in Nigeria, Indonesia, Pakistan and now East Africa as a print and radio journalist and communications specialist.
A time of cholera in Southern Sudan
Author: Joanne Offer
I'm standing outside a typical village church. But today its mud walls and thatched roof are offering a different kind of sanctuary - it's being used as a makeshift centre to treat suspected cholera patients from the surrounding area. Inside, three women lie on mats on the dirt floor. They're hooked up to IV drips and seem to be making a good recovery, but I'm told that a young boy died here last night. His body went into convulsions because he didn't have enough fluids in his system. There was nothing the local nurse could do. ...
Author: Joanne Offer
I'm standing outside a typical village church. But today its mud walls and thatched roof are offering a different kind of sanctuary - it's being used as a makeshift centre to treat suspected cholera patients from the surrounding area. Inside, three women lie on mats on the dirt floor. They're hooked up to IV drips and seem to be making a good recovery, but I'm told that a young boy died here last night. His body went into convulsions because he didn't have enough fluids in his system. There was nothing the local nurse could do. ...
What makes a Ugandan warrior lay down his gun?
Author: Joanne Offer
What makes a warrior lay down his gun? I got the intriguing chance to find out when I met the Nadunget peace committee - a group of 40 or so men and women, many of whom were once involved in or affected by armed raids, but who now promote peace across Moroto district in the Karamoja region of northern Uganda. The committee members go to nearby villages to sing peace songs, play out dramas and use their own experiences to explain why fighting benefits no one. Women who've been widowed by raiding talk of the emotional and financial hardship of losing their loved ones. Children who've been orphaned tell others that life is precious. It's heartbreaking stuff to hear. ...
Author: Joanne Offer
What makes a warrior lay down his gun? I got the intriguing chance to find out when I met the Nadunget peace committee - a group of 40 or so men and women, many of whom were once involved in or affected by armed raids, but who now promote peace across Moroto district in the Karamoja region of northern Uganda. The committee members go to nearby villages to sing peace songs, play out dramas and use their own experiences to explain why fighting benefits no one. Women who've been widowed by raiding talk of the emotional and financial hardship of losing their loved ones. Children who've been orphaned tell others that life is precious. It's heartbreaking stuff to hear. ...