Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Sudanese refugees face gruelling wait in overcrowde­d camps

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RENK, South Sudan (AFP) — A new truck arrives in the South Sudanese town of Renk, packed with dozens of elderly men, women and children, their exhausted faces betraying the strain of their traumatic journey out of war-ravaged Sudan.

They are among more than half a million people who have crossed the border into South Sudan, which is struggling to accommodat­e the new arrivals.

Renk is just 10 kilometers from Sudan, where fighting broke out in April last year between army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, commander of the paramilita­ry Rapid Support Forces.

Since then, Renk’s two United Nations-run transit centers have been overwhelme­d by an uninterrup­ted influx of frightened people, fleeing for their lives.

The journey is rife with danger, said Fatima Mohammed, a 33-yearold teacher who escaped with her husband and five children from El-Obeid city in central Sudan.

“The bullets were entering our house. We were trapped between crossfire in our own street. So we understood that we needed to leave for the good of our kids,” she told Agence France-Presse, describing the situation in Sudan as “unsustaina­ble.”

It took them five days to make their escape, with Sudanese soldiers and

RSF fighters “making (it) difficult for us to leave the country.”

“They took all our phones at one checkpoint, a lot of our money (at) another one. We saw abuses happening at those checkpoint­s,” she said.

8M flee Sudan

Since the start of the conflict, nearly eight million people, half of them children, have fled Sudan.

Around 560,000 of them have taken refuge in South Sudan, according to the United Nations, which estimates that around 1,500 new arrivals turn up in the country every day.

Many spend months waiting in the transit camps, hopeful that someday soon they will be able to return home.

The war has claimed the lives of thousands of civilians, according to UN figures.

Around 25 million people, more than half of Sudan’s population, need humanitari­an assistance, while around 3.8 million children under the age of five are suffering from malnutriti­on, the UN says.

While many in Renk long to return home, others hope to travel onwards to the town of Malakal in Upper Nile state, which is also hosting a huge number of refugees.

At Renk port, hundreds of people lined up under the oppressive glare of the midday sun, waiting hours to hop aboard the metal boats which make the trip at least twice a week.

With up to 10 trucks and buses turning up in Renk every day, the UN is trying to mobilize the internatio­nal community, launching an appeal for $4.1 billion this month to respond to the most urgent humanitari­an needs.

 ?? LUIS TATO/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? SUDANESE refugees and ethnic South Sudanese who have fled the war in Sudan carry their belongings while boarding a boat at the shores of the White Nile River in the Port of Renk. The boats take hundreds of Sudanese refugees and South Sudanese returnees daily to the city of Malakal in a journey that takes days.
LUIS TATO/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE SUDANESE refugees and ethnic South Sudanese who have fled the war in Sudan carry their belongings while boarding a boat at the shores of the White Nile River in the Port of Renk. The boats take hundreds of Sudanese refugees and South Sudanese returnees daily to the city of Malakal in a journey that takes days.

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