Skip to main content

South Sudan warning: respond to humanitarian crisis now or face catastrophe

The lives of seven million people are at risk as food crisis and conflict grips South Sudan. The international community needs to step up with a massive injection of emergency aid.

A major food crisis is endangering millions of people in South Sudan as the country reels from a violent conflict which erupted in December last year. The violence has caused more than a million people to flee their homes, markets and health facilities have been destroyed and cropping patterns have been disrupted by the fighting.

As a result, not enough seed has been planted – and seasonal rains are making things worse. Now the international community must face up to the fact that 7 million people are at risk of severe food insecurity in the coming year unless they get more help.

With falling food production and failing markets, the resulting widespread food insecurity is leading to alarming rates of malnutrition. The figures of children with malnutrition treated at feeding centres in some of the hardest hit areas has more than doubled since last year, and children under the age of five are at particular risk.

In February 2014 it was estimated that 1.25 million South Sudanese children under the age of five would need immediate nutrition services by June.

The time to act is now

There is still time to prevent the worst from happening in South Sudan. We need to learn from the mistakes of the past, not repeat them. That means rapidly scaling up food assistance and nutrition interventions now as well as other essential services like emergency water, sanitation and hygiene.

Oxfam is providing assistance in five areas of South Sudan from the capital Juba to the northern town of Melut and has helped 130,000 people caught up in this horrific crisis. Oxfam is also working with partners in Uganda to help refugees and host communities with water, sanitation and livelihoods needs.

Read more blogs

Not In My Name: Act now to support Palestinians in Gaza

The Israeli Government’s war in Gaza has killed tens of thousands of Palestinian people, including children. Two million people have been forced into so-called safe zones, which continue to be...

Read more
Palestinian Territory, Occupied: Children and their families are returning to their homes or the remains of their homes to check the status of their homes. Photo: Alef Multimedia Company/Oxfam

What’s happening in Gaza, the West Bank and Lebanon?

For over 15 months, the people of Gaza have endured a relentless war that has killed almost 50,000 people, left tens of thousands injured or missing, and displaced 90% of...

Read more
Bangladesh: Jannat with her family. Jannat lives in Nayapara, in the Cox's Bazar area which hosts over 1.7 million Rohingya refugees. Her community was severely impacted by water scarcity until Oxfam partner organisation NGO Forum installed a Mini Piped Water Distribution Network, enabling community members to access safe, clean water whenever they need. Photo: Fabeha Monir/Oxfam

What is the Rohingya crisis?

Who are the Rohingya people? The Rohingya are a Muslim ethnic minority group from Myanmar, where they have faced decades of persecution and have been denied citizenship. Since the late...

Read more