Document #1313874
TNH – The New Humanitarian (formerly IRIN News) (Author)
But they are fleeing into a region hit by food shortages as a result of South Sudan's own conflict. The UN has warned that the country is facing unprecedented levels of hardship, with people displaced by fighting further south in Unity State at particular risk in the coming dry season, between April and July.
UNHCR supports the government’s decision to relocate the refugees, arguing that Yida is too close to the border and the fighting to the north. Its proximity “creates threats to the security of refugees and undermines the principle of the civilian character of asylum,” said Nuri.
Yida is inside “a military area,” explained Dabi. “We need to keep the refugees away from it.”
Rebel JEM and SPLM-N combatants are a constant presence in Yida, and it’s known that some of them have relatives among the refugees. Although part of Sudan, South Kordofan is home to many pro-South Sudan communities. Protesting their marginalisation, they fought alongside southern rebels in a war that culminated in independence for South Sudan in 2011.
Desperate education needs
Ajuong Thonk has its attractions. It boasts in-camp roads, a primary healthcare centre, three primary schools, a secondary school and a computer lab.
Saddam Tia, 17, walked for more than two days with his 10-year-old cousin, Hassan, to reach South Sudan from their village of Angolo. A Sudanese government airstrike killed his mother, destroyed his school, and he doesn’t know the whereabouts of his father.
“I just want to continue my education in the refugee camp and become a doctor,” he told IRIN.
See: One surgeon for an entire war
Around 60 percent of Sudanese refugees are minors, looking for an opportunity to complete school in South Sudan. Some 11,000 students receive primary and secondary education in Ajuong Thok, supported by NGOs, the UNHCR and the South Sudanese government.
The irony is that more than half South Sudan’s own children are out of school – the highest rate in the world – largely as a consequence of its own civil war, which broke out in 2013. During the conflict, schools have been destroyed or turned into barracks, with children increasingly conscripted into the ranks of government and rebel forces.
Elizabeth Aldukun travelled for three days from her home village of Amdorein in South Kordofan with six children. “I came to South Sudan because my husband fled to Khartoum and I need to give a better future to my kids,” she told IRIN in Ajuong Thok.
“Wouldn’t it be better if the humanitarian organisations could bring all these services to our original villages [in the north],” she added.
Despite being one of the poorest countries in the world, South Sudan hosts more than 263,000 refugees, mostly from Sudan. neighbouring Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Ethiopia. The number is expected to reach 300,000 this year.
As a result of South Sudan's conflict, as many as 2.8 million people – nearly 25 percent of the population – are in urgent need of food assistance, the UN warned this week.
Theme (s): Aid Policy, Conflict, Refugees/IDPs,