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Press release

Christian Aid on alert in South Sudan for looming refugee crisis

The international development charity Christian Aid fears the turmoil in Sudan could push refugees into South Sudan.

It’s working with its partners on the ground to prepare for the trickle to become a wave of displaced people crossing the porous and unstable border with its northern neighbour.

Clashes between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) are spreading into the bordering regions of South Darfur and Blue Nile, raising fears of a return to all-out-war in a country with a history of armed conflict.

There are also worries about South Sudan’s fragile peace process from disrupted cross border trade, including food and fuel supplies. The country is dependent on neighbouring Sudan’s oil infrastructure for its exports.

James Wani, Christian Aid South Sudan Country Director, said: “South Sudan is already facing a severe food emergency. There is a significant shortfall in humanitarian funding. If this conflict in Sudan doesn’t stop soon, and refuges start crossing the border in large numbers, then this will exacerbate an existing humanitarian crisis.”

Christian Aid is calling on the South Sudanese government not to diverge from its commitment to implementing both the peace agreement and formation of the government of national unity which requires citizen engagement. 

ENDS

Notes to Editors

South Sudan formally broke away from its northern neighbour in 2011 after one of Africa's longest and bloodiest civil wars.

Faith leaders have played a prominent role in sustaining the national peace process by building trust between different factions. These efforts are no longer funded by the UK government after aid budget cuts in 2021.

More than 85% of South Sudan’s national budget depends on oil exports, which are in turn dependent on the oil pipelines that cross Sudan to Port Sudan for export. If the pipelines are damaged, the likelihood is a rapid and significant deterioration to Sudan’s economy and increased political instability.

Links to more background information:

Sudan | OCHA (unocha.org)

South Sudan: 2023 Humanitarian Response Plan | HumanitarianResponse

South Sudan: Acute Food Insecurity and Acute Malnutrition Situation for February - March 2022 and Projections for April - July 2022 | IPC - Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (ipcinfo.org)