165,000 people displaced in South Sudan- UNHCR

the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) says no fewer than 165,000 people have fled their homes, seeking safety either within the country or across borders, since a sharp escalation in fighting in South Sudan in late February.

Violence between armed groups in Upper Nile state and other flashpoints has crippled essential services, triggered food insecurity and worsened disease outbreaks, including cholera – forcing some to be displaced repeatedly.

“Roughly 65,000 have been internally displaced in Upper Nile state alone.

“Access to aid in conflict hotspots is limited, with fighting and movement restrictions cutting off assistance,” UNHCR said in a statement on Tuesday.

Lifesaving supplies, including medicine and healthcare, that can curb the rising cholera cases cannot be accessed. Heavy rains threaten to worsen the crisis, flooding roads and driving up transport costs.

South Sudan has also absorbed over a million people fleeing conflict in Sudan.

Another 103,000 South Sudanese have sought refuge in neighbouring countries, pushing the total number of South Sudanese refugees to 2.3 million.

It said, “This emergency could not have come at a worse time,” Samadou Dian Balde, UNHCR’s Regional Director for the East, Horn of Africa and Great Lakes region, said.

“Many of the refugees are seeking safety in countries which have challenges of their own or are already dealing with emergencies amidst ongoing brutal funding cuts, straining our ability to provide even basic lifesaving assistance.”

Despite the conflict in Sudan, 41,000 South Sudanese had sought refuge there – 26,000 in White Nile state, where over 410,000 South Sudanese already live, many repeatedly displaced due to ongoing violence in their host country.

The surge in arrivals in Sudan has created an urgent need for additional space, while essential services are overwhelmed due to cholera outbreaks and ongoing security challenges.

In the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), 23,000 had arrived amid the country’s insecurity.

Some 21,000 South Sudanese have sought refuge in Ethiopia.

Previously living in makeshift shelters along riverbanks near the border, new arrivals were receiving UNHCR aid further from the border.

However, infrastructure and services in the area remain severely overstretched, worsened by a cholera outbreak.

Uganda, which played host to one million South Sudanese refugees, has taken in 18,000 since March, a 135 per cent year-on-year increase.

Nearly 70 per cent of the population are children; many are forced to take longer and more hazardous routes to safety.

UNHCR is providing refugees with critical relief items, documentation and specialised support to survivors of gender-based violence.

However, the agency requires $36 million to provide necessary support for the next six months—including shelter, water, health and nutrition screening, and cash assistance.

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