Tens Of Thousands Of Women And Children Are Fleeing From South Sudan To
Sudan
Tens of thousands of South Sudanese women and children have crossed the
border into Sudan since the beginning of the year, fleeing violence and the
looming threat of famine.
30 May 2017
[image: Tens Of Thousands Of Women And Children Are Fleeing From South
Sudan To Sudan]
A woman from South Sudan holds a child on her knees in a camp [Credit: AFP]

SOURCE: IFRC

* NAIROBI/GENEVA, 30 May 2017 [Gurtong] – *This represents a dramatic spike
in the movement of people across the border. Nearly 137,000 South Sudanese
have crossed into Sudan since 1 January – already more than the 131,000
that arrived during 2016, according to UNHCR.

Aid workers on the ground report that the vast majority of new arrivals are
women and children.

“The people who are arriving are in a desperate state,” said Dr Fatoumata
Nafo-Traoré, Regional Director for Africa for the International Federation
of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC). “Most are in poor health,
exhausted from their journeys, and traumatized by what they have seen and
experienced.”

In all, about 417,000 South Sudanese refugees have entered Sudan since
December 2013. More than half are in camps in East and South Darfur and
West and South Kordofan.

The Sudanese Red Crescent Society is present in these areas and has, in
partnership with the UN, been supporting more than 300,000 with food aid,
and about 90,000 refugees with clean water, sanitation and health services.

However, with the increased arrival of refuges, IFRC and SSRC are warning
of an elevated risk of diseases such as malaria, as existing healthcare and
water and sanitation services come under ever greater strain.

In response to the growing needs of refugee communities, IFRC and SSRC have
launched an international emergency appeal for just under 4.2 million Swiss
francs. Through this appeal, Red Crescent volunteers and staff will provide
assistance to more than 63,000 people, with a range of life-saving and
life-sustaining health, water, sanitation and hygiene, and emergency
shelter services.

“The regional consequences of the humanitarian emergency in South Sudan are
rapidly worsening,” said Dr Nafo-Traoré. “There is every indication that
the number of people crossing into Sudan will continue to climb.

“These people are the most vulnerable – children and women who are arriving
with absolutely nothing, having already endured so much.”

Posted in: Home
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Humanitarian
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