Showing posts with label Returnees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Returnees. Show all posts

Friday, December 29, 2023

South Sudan Juba: China is delivering a total of thirty-five trucks of vital supplies for returnees and refugees

Report from Radio Tamazuj
Dated Friday, 29 December 2023 - here is a copy in full:

Juba: China delivers six trucks of vital supplies for displaced persons

Six trucks, transporting plastic sheets to aid displaced individuals from Sudan, have arrived in Juba, as announced by South Sudan’s Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs on Thursday. The aid, donated by China, is intended to support refugees and returnees who have been displaced from Sudan.


Minister Albino Akol Atak, overseeing Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management, addressed reporters during the reception of the delivered items in Juba. He confirmed the receipt of six trucks, with an additional 20 already stationed in Nimule. The Ministry anticipates the arrival of a total of 35 trucks, carrying 26,145 pieces of plastic sheets to provide crucial support for the returnees and refugees.


“This is a generous donation from the government of China to the people of South Sudan, reflecting our engagement with the international community and donors. It is aimed at seeking assistance for the government and supporting its efforts in responding to the influx of refugees and returnees arising from the conflict in Sudan,” stated Minister Akol.


He further highlighted the urgent situation, mentioning that a total of 460,000 people have already been displaced to South Sudan due to the Sudanese conflict. These individuals are in desperate need of shelter, food, and medicines both in the transit centers and upon reaching their final destinations.


Akol explained that the donation from China will be utilized to provide shelter for the returnees and refugees at both transit sites and their final destinations. He clarified, “This donation will be used to shelter refugees and returnees arriving from Sudan. Some will be directed to transit sites across the country, while others will be taken to their ultimate destinations. It is part of China’s commitment to support the South Sudanese government.”


Akol also hinted at additional support from the Chinese government, amounting to 1.4 million U.S. dollars, which is expected to be delivered before the end of January next year.


Akol conveyed appreciation for the substantial contribution from the government of China, underscoring the authentic friendship between South Sudan and China.


“The government of China has played a crucial role, and on behalf of President Salva Kiir, I extend heartfelt thanks to the government and the people of China for their generous support during our time of need. This underscores that China is a steadfast friend to South Sudan, consistently providing assistance in times of challenges,” Akol remarked.


He further noted that with China’s backing, the government is poised to experience relief. This development brings positive news for the returnees and refugees currently stranded, whether in transit sites or at their designated places of return.


View original: https://radiotamazuj.org/en/news/article/juba-china-delivers-six-trucks-of-vital-supplies-for-displaced-persons

______________________________


Related 


China supports displaced persons in South Sudan

There will be another support from the Chinese government for the displaced persons totaling 1.4 million U.S. dollars, which will be delivered before the end of January 2024.

Source: Xinhua, Fri 29 Dec 2023, 00:42:45, Editor: huaxia

http://www.chinaview.cn/africa/20231229/08a14d2ed350400389bb2593fceaa131/c.html


ENDS

Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Over 91,500 people enter Ethiopia from Sudan: UN

NOTE, this news of 91,500 people entering Ethiopia from Sudan says, according to UNOCHA, Ethiopian returnees represent the greater percentage of arrivals, currently standing at 43 percent, followed by Sudanese nationals at 39 percent, and third-country nationals at 18 percent.

Read more in a report by Xinhua via Big News Network
Dated Tuesday, 21 November 2023, 04:44 GMT+11 - here is a copy in full:

Over 91,500 people enter Ethiopia from conflict-hit Sudan: UN

ADDIS ABABA, Nov 20 (Xinhua) - The number of people arriving in Ethiopia owing to the conflict in Sudan has surpassed 91,500, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) has said.


As of Nov. 14, over 91,500 people entered Ethiopia since the onset of the ongoing crisis in neighboring Sudan in April, the UNOCHA said in its latest situation update about the impact of the situation in Sudan on Ethiopia issued Monday.


According to the UNOCHA, crossings have been made through various border points of entry, but mainly at the Metema and Kurmuk areas in the Amhara and Benishangul Gumz regions, respectively.


Ethiopian returnees represent the greater percentage of arrivals, currently standing at 43 percent, followed by Sudanese nationals at 39 percent, and third-country nationals at 18 percent, it said.


Deadly clashes have been going on between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces in Khartoum and other areas since April 15, killing up to 9,000 people by October, forcing more than 6 million displaced and leaving 25 million in need of aid, according to the Sudan situation report released on Nov. 12 by the UNOCHA.


View original: https://www.bignewsnetwork.com/news/274039790/over-91500-people-enter-ethiopia-from-conflict-hit-sudan-un

__________________________


Related reports


Sudan Watch - November 12, 2023

Sudan: Humanitarian Update (12 November 2023)

https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2023/11/sudan-humanitarian-update-12-november.html


For previous UN OCHA Sudan humanitarian updates:

[Ends]

Saturday, November 18, 2023

100 returnees in Unity State head back to transit camps near South Sudan-Sudan border citing hunger

Report from Radio Tamazuj
By Radio Tamazuj
Dated Thursday, 16 November 2023 - here is a copy in full:

100 returnees in Unity State flee back to Sudan citing hunger

Returnees set up makeshift shelters in Renk after fleeing war in Sudan. (Reuters photo)


A hundred South Sudanese who recently returned from Sudan to escape violence are now returning to Sudan due to a worsening humanitarian crisis and hunger in Unity State.


Residents in Unity State reported to Radio Tamazuj that the returnees are heading back to Renk and Thuongor transit camps near the South Sudan-Sudan border and the road leading to the Unity oilfield.


The camp chairman at the UN-run Protection of Civilians site in Bentiu, John Tot Riak, confirmed that some of the returnees had left for Sudan due to the harsh conditions in the camp and state.


“I am aware of the returnees who came to us. When they got us here suffering, they said they could not add to the suffering,” he said. “Some of them have gone back and some are planning to follow those who left.”


The returnees who fled the conflict in Sudan have endured over six months without food aid in Unity State, prompting their decision to leave the Bentiu IDP camp for a country at war.


Nyakume Stephen, a resident of the Bentiu IDP camp, said that the returnees explained that death is the same everywhere.


“They (returnees) said death cannot be divided into two which is why they go back. And we know that death cannot be divided into two,” he stated. “I accommodated sixty returnees. I gave them two rooms which I built because they had no relatives in the block. They left in October. The situation forced them.”


Compounding the problem, Bentiu IDP residents have faced a food aid suspension since July by the World Food Programme (WFP) due to a lack of funding from donors.


According to Tom Ruai, many returnees have gone back to Sudan through Renk County in Upper Nile State and the Unity Oilfield road of Unity State.


“When fighting happened in Khartoum, many people returned home. Now they are being forced by hunger to all go back,” he recounted. “Some of them are dying along the way while footing. Some are using Manga to go back to Renk and Thuongor. Some have gone back to Khartoum. What is facing them is hunger.”


Most returnees in Unity State have voiced concerns about a lack of food, health facilities, clean drinking water, access to education, and a measles outbreak since arriving in the area.


View original: https://radiotamazuj.org/en/news/article/100-returnees-in-unity-state-flee-back-to-sudan-citing-hunger


[Ends]

Wednesday, November 15, 2023

South Sudanese head home from war-torn Sudan

Photo: Displaced people and returnees trek between the towns of Rotriak and Bentiu in Rubkona County, Unity State in South Sudan as roads become impassable for vehicles due to severe flooding. Intense rains make it difficult for humanitarian partners to access displaced people with aid in most Unity State counties. It also makes it challenging to move returnees from Sudan to their final destinations as roads become impassable. OCHA/Alioune Ndiaye


Source: https://www.unocha.org/latest/news-and-stories

___________________________


Article from World Food Programme (WFP)
By Eulalia Berlanga
Dated 3 October 2023 - here is a copy in full:

South Sudanese head home from war-torn Sudan

For many South Sudanese, Sudan was a refuge during their country’s civil war. Now WFP is assisting returnees, as they confront fresh hardship in their homeland

Aker Monychol Biar feeds her son a special food supplement to treat malnutrition. Photo: WFP/Eulalia Berlanga

When Aker Monychol Biar’s husband was killed in the latter years of South Sudan’s civil war, she headed north to Sudan, seeking safety and a job to pay for her children’s education. 


“There was nothing to eat and I needed to work for my children,” says Aker, a mother of five, who hails from South Sudan’s northern county of Malakal. “I’d heard there was manual work (in Sudan) that I could do.”


Now, she is back in Malakal after fleeing another war - this time in Sudan. Aker recounts her odyssey sitting outside a temporary shelter that she shares with other displaced people, as she feeds a special food supplement to fight malnutrition to her youngest child, an 18-month-old boy.

A displaced woman receives WFP food assistance in Malakal, South Sudan. Photo: WFP/Eulalia Berlanga

So far, nearly 300,000 people have crossed into South Sudan from Sudan since conflict erupted in that neighbouring country in April. The vast majority of new arrivals are South Sudanese.


Each has a variation of Aker’s story. In recent years, not just conflict, but climate shocks, soaring food prices and a depreciating currency converged to create a hunger crisis in South Sudan, forcing many families to leave in search of livelihoods and education in neighbouring Sudan.


Now, with another war raging, South Sudanese like Aker are going home - to face the same toxic mix of challenges that drove their exodus, but with even fewer resources to surmount them. As they continue streaming in, humanitarian organizations are struggling to respond as funding runs dry.

Displaced people at Malakal transit centre in South Sudan, where they face onward journeys to a new and uncertain life. Photo: WFP/Eulalia Berlanga

“We are seeing families turn from one disaster to another as they flee desperate circumstances in Sudan only to find despair in South Sudan,” says World Food Programme (WFP) Representative in South Sudan, Mary-Ellen McGroarty. 


Struggling to meet vast needs

Since the beginning of Sudan’s crisis, WFP has reached a quarter of a million people crossing into South Sudan with food and cash, along with high-energy biscuits and support to treat and prevent malnutrition. But it is not enough.


“WFP is struggling to meet the vast humanitarian needs at the border,” McGroarty says, “but we lack the resources needed to provide the response that’s required.”

Many people displaced by Sudan's conflict arrive in Renk, South Sudan, where rains have turned the dusty land into mud. Photo: WFP/Eulalia Berlanga

The majority of those fleeing Sudan arrive through a border crossing near Renk in South Sudan’s Upper Nile State - where the rainy season has turned the dusty land into a muddy mess.


Many of the newcomers are hungry, sick and exhausted. One in five children and more than a quarter of pregnant and breastfeeding women screened at the border are malnourished.


“It was a very hard journey. We didn’t have anything; no food, no water, no shelter, nothing. It was especially bad when it rained,” says South Sudanese mother Nyanchiu Pehok, who recently arrived in Renk with her eight children.

Nyanchiu Pehok with her son Cheng at a nutrition centre in Renk, where he was found to be acutely malnourished. Photo: WFP/Eulalia Berlanga

Nyanchiu went to Khartoum last year to attend her brother’s wedding. She decided to stay, hoping to earn a better living to support her family. She worked long hours washing clothes and cleaning houses, making sure her children never went to sleep hungry. 


Then Sudan’s conflict broke out, forcing her to make the homeward journey. Nyanchiu’s youngest child, nine-month-old Cheng, became sick while the family was still in Khartoum.


The journey to South Sudan only made things worse. At a nutrition centre in Renk, Cheng tested positive for acute malnutrition.

Displaced people in Renk wait to board a boat to Malakal, South Sudan. Photo: WFP/Eulalia Berlanga 

“The humanitarian situation for returnees is unacceptable,” says WFP’s McGroarty. “It is the most vulnerable members of these communities – women, children, the elderly and people living with disabilities – who are suffering the most.”


Hard times ahead

WFP and other humanitarian agencies are working to move newly arrived families like Nyanchiu’s onwards from Renk as quickly as possible. The food-secure region has traditionally had only a bare-bones humanitarian presence. It has since been overwhelmed by the influx. 


But moving people on - and meeting their most basic humanitarian needs - has been difficult. Besides insufficient funding, onward transport has been a challenge in an area with no suitable connecting roads.

South Sudan's White Nile is the main way to move conflict-displaced people onward from Renk, as road connections are challenging. Photo: WFP/Eulalia Berlanga

Instead, people are relying on the White Nile, a tributary of the Nile River. The journey by boat to Malakal takes two to three days. From there, the displaced still have a long and difficult journey to reach the communities they choose to settle in, and an even more difficult journey to rebuild their livelihoods.


A couple of weeks ago, Aker made the river journey to Malakal with her family. WFP had provided them, and thousands of other travelers in recent months, with vitamin-packed high energy biscuits - enough to tide them over for the trip. 


In Malakal, she received sorghum, oil, pulses and salt from WFP to feed her family. Funding constraints, however, mean the agency can only distribute half the amount of food families need. In practical terms, this equates to a little less than 300 grams of food per person, per day.


On a recent day, Aker cooked the pulses on an open fire as her children sat on the ground nearby. She had no money to add in spices or vegetables, but the children still ate the food with gusto.

Aker's children tuck into a simple meal made with WFP pulses. Photo: WFP/Eulalia Berlanga

“I am lucky because I received this food, but I don’t know how others will survive today if they get nothing," Aker says. "We’re facing very bad conditions and need a lot of things, but we are trying to support each other and trade what we can.” 


More families are arriving in South Sudan. Many have been living in Khartoum and elsewhere in Sudan for years, decades, or even generations. Now they are moving to rural areas of South Sudan, without the skills they need to restart their lives. 


They have survived difficult journeys. But for many, it’s only the beginning. 


The World Food Programme (WFP) is providing life-saving support to families at the border and at their final destination, but more resources are critical to ensure these families are not left behind. Across all of South Sudan, WFP has a US$536 million funding gap for the next six months. 


Learn more about WFP's work in South Sudan and Sudan


View original: https://www.wfp.org/stories/south-sudanese-head-home-war-torn-sudan


[Ends]

Monday, June 26, 2023

OCHA: 130,000 fled into South Sudan since April 15

MORE THAN 10,000 people have registered as refugees in South Sudan after fleeing the conflict in Sudan, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), has said.


While overall 130,000 have fled into South Sudan since fighting in Sudan started in April, most were South Sudanese returning home. Read more.


Report at BBC News Sudan
By Nichola Mandil, BBC News, Juba
Published Monday 26 June 2023 at 13:43 - here is a full copy:


South Sudan takes in 10,000 refugees fleeing Sudan


Reuters

Copyright: Reuters

Image caption: The Gorom refugee camp is near South Sudan's capital, Juba


More than 10,000 people have registered as refugees in South Sudan after fleeing the conflict in Sudan, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (Ocha), has said.


While, overall, 130,000 people have fled into South Sudan since the fighting started in April, most of them were South Sudanese returning home.


Ocha said the latest influx continues to compound a dire situation as the arrival numbers are projected to continue to increase as fighting continues.


Among those arriving include unaccompanied or separated children, the elderly, persons with disabilities, those with urgent medical needs, single- or female-headed households and pregnant women, Ocha added.


Many arrivals have witnessed, or were subjected to, violence and exploitation such as extortion and looting, including during their journey to South Sudan.


Looking at the rest of Sudan's neighbours, Egypt - with 255,000 - and Chad - with 120,000 - have taken in the bulk of the refugees fleeing the violence.


Read more about those fleeing Sudan:

The Eritrean refugees caught between two crises

'How I saved my red guitar from Khartoum war zone'


Click here to view original.

[Ends]