Nearly 1m refugees face dire conditions, says UN
Despite a peace agreement signed nearly a year ago by the government
and the rebels, fighting has continued and the country's crisis has
worsened.
A woman and child sit inside a make-shift camp in Uganda, which borders war-torn South Sudan, on July 16, 2016
Nearly a million refugees fleeing the brutal conflict in South Sudan, most of them women and children, are suffering dire conditions in camps across the region, the UN said on Monday.
Refugee agency UNHCR said arrivals in Uganda alone had peaked at "more than 8,000 in one day" last month after an outbreak of fresh fighting in the capital of neighbouring South Sudan.
Ninety per cent of new arrivals were women and children, the UN added.
"With
refugees fleeing South Sudan in their thousands, surrounding countries
are straining under the weight of large numbers of displaced people and
critically underfunded operations," UNHCR said in a statement.
"Already there are some 930,000 refugees in the region, and more are arriving daily."
Despite
a peace agreement signed nearly a year ago by the government and the
rebels, fighting has continued and the country's crisis has worsened.
Tens of thousands of people have been killed since civil war resumed in December 2013.
Towns have been razed in fighting characterised by rape, murder and the deployment of child soldiers.
Food
shortages are common with nearly five million needing emergency
rations, while some parts of the country are on the brink of famine, and
the economy is in free fall.
Citing the example of a new 100,000 capacity camp at Yumbe, in Uganda, UNHCR said it urgently needs more money to "speed up the relocation of more than 45,000 refugees out of overstretched and severely congested reception and transit centres."
"With so many people living in such close proximity, the potential for disease outbreak is high," the agency said.
UNHCR
said it had only received a fifth of the $609 million (545 million
euros) it needed to cater to nearly one million South Sudanese refugees
in six countries in the region, as well as the roughly 1.6 million
uprooted and living in displacement camps inside the strife-torn
country.
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