correspondent mario loyola reports from the camp, which is 80 kilometers away from the region off to grad school. the camp once housed refugees who fled if your peers famine in the 980 s. . now some 9000 people have saved themselves once again. but this time it's because of war. in this hospital, people wait for hours before receiving treatment. like i've got here, she, her baby and her father escaped the war in the town of the progun, obviously, but really i was afraid because the bombs kept falling for 3 days. we just left without money without clothes. and it took 10 days to come here. now we're here in sudan, we've been in this camp for 3 days. we don't have any shelter. her father has terminal cancer since they got out, he hasn't received his medication. people here at dusk, but they tell us water, food and shelter are scarce. some of them have to sleep on the ground, struggling to get enough food and medical aid. the new refugees crossing the border to sudan, worry aid groups, their representative told us, we are able to respond to a growing influx. people need everything from