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SOUTH SUDAN - WOMEN & CHILDREN ARE MAJORITY OF 81,000 + CIVILIAN VICTIMS OF CONFLICT WHO HAVE FLED FOR SAFETY

 

How does it feel to be a mother in South Sudan, to have believed your new country would be good for you and your family, only to have to grab your children and flee to a UN Compound or other hopefully safe place because of the devastating conflict that has destroyed your home, possessions, security of food and water...many parts of your country. How does it feel to not know if you can protect your children to survive, and as a mother, be strong for them on the outside, but inside feel fear, pain, anguish, despair, tears!!

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/25/world/africa/south-sudan-crisis.html?hpw&rref=world&_r=0 - December 24, 2013

 

James Akena/Reuters

About 12,000 members of the Nuer ethnic group in South Sudan have fled to a United Nations camp near the Juba airport.

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http://www.unicef.org/media/media_71645.html

 

SOUTH SUDAN - CHILDREN IN GRAVE DANGER AMID INCREASING VIOLENCE

JUBA, 24 December 2013 – As the violence in South Sudan escalates and tens of thousands of civilians take refuge in UN compounds around the country, children are in grave danger, says UNICEF.

“An estimated 81,000 civilians have fled their homes, the majority of them women and children, but we believe that with the situation changing so rapidly the actual numbers are likely to be higher,” UNICEF’s Representative in South Sudan, Iyorlumun Uhaa, said today.

“We are especially worried about those in and around Bor, in Jonglei State, where the fighting has recently been heaviest. There are desperate shortages of food and clean water at the UN compound there and the lack of sanitation facilities poses a high risk of disease. Children, always among the most vulnerable in conflict, are spending their days without shelter in the intense heat and sun, and sleeping in the open during the cold nights,” he added.

Although the intense fighting is making it difficult to reach civilians sheltering in the UN compound in Bor with humanitarian assistance, aid is being delivered to the two UN compounds in Juba, where an estimated 20,000 people have taken refuge.

UNICEF and its partners are constructing latrines, with some 400 due to be completed in coming days, and have organized and equipped teams of volunteers to clean large areas where people have had no choice but to defecate in the open for days.

Increased supplies of water are getting to the camps and UNICEF, along with other UN agencies and other aid organizations are setting up tents for shelter, distribution of supplies and registration of displaced families, which is especially important in reuniting children who have become separated from their parents.

Increased emergency health care is available at the compounds, and UNICEF has delivered high energy biscuits to provide much-needed nutrients for children aged six months to five years old.

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