Civilians experience record levels of food insecurity
- The impacts of persistent conflict, climate change and political uncertainty return South Sudan to the IRC’s Watchlist Top 10.
- The country is still recovering from a civil war that ended in 2018, and while conflict has decreased, localised fighting remains widespread.
- Climate disasters including severe flooding and drought make it increasingly difficult for people to access food and basic resources; more South Sudanese people than ever—7.8 million—will face crisis levels of food insecurity in 2023.
Country facts
- Population: 11.2 million
- People displaced by crisis: 4.8 million
- Rank in Human Development Index: 185 of 188
IRC response
- Started work in southern Sudan: 1989
- People assisted: 1.1 million in 2019
The region of southern Sudan had spent decades in the grip of ongoing conflict before South Sudan gained independence in 2011. The IRC provides lifesaving assistance and humanitarian aid to vulnerable South Sudanese who are trying to rebuild their lives and restore peace.
After decades of civil war, southern Sudan seceded from Sudan in 2011. The new country, South Sudan, enjoyed two years of fragile peace before political rivalry erupted once again into open conflict in 2013, leaving an estimated 380,000 dead and 2 million displaced. 2.2 million people have been forced to flee to neighbouring countries.
Today, while more than half of the population is facing crisis or worse levels of food insecurity, the omnipresent threat of violence has made it dangerous for aid groups to reach those most in need. Flooding has wiped out farmers’ harvests as well as basic infrastructure and health facilities.
A peace deal signed in October 2018 remains fragile and even if it holds, localised conflict will continue. A new unity government that took office in early 2020 faces the challenge of leading the country’s recovery from civil conflict amid unrelenting violence, an economic crisis, and now an unprecedented pandemic in one of the world’s weakest health systems.
South Sudan remains one of the poorest and most undeveloped countries in the world. Persistent conflict, desert locust swarms, an economic crisis, recurrent flooding and COVID-19 are increasing the risk of famine in 2021.
There is also a severe shortage of health care services and professionals. Medical facilities are under-equipped and unhygienic. Since many South Sudanese do not have access to clean water, deadly diseases such as malaria continue to spread. COVID-19 threatens to exacerbate the country’s health crisis.
Women and girls, in particular, are affected by the crisis, many facing violence, abuse and exploitation daily.
The IRC’s mission is to help people whose lives and livelihoods are shattered by conflict and disaster to survive, recover and gain control of their future.
The IRC has been one of the largest providers of aid in southern Sudan for over 30 years, offering emergency assistance throughout decades of war and supporting vulnerable populations in hard-to-reach areas. With 75 percent of our efforts focused on health care, our response includes capacity building in state clinics, training of local health workers, nutrition programmes, and sanitation services.
As South Sudan struggles to build a lasting peace, the IRC is focusing our efforts in the Central Equatoria, Northern Bahr el Ghazal, Unity and Lakes states by:
- expanding the capacity of state clinics and training local health workers to provide basic and reproductive health care;
- providing medical, psychosocial and legal support to survivors of sexual violence;
- training community leaders and government officials on the importance of upholding human rights;
- providing nutrition services and restoring wells and providing sanitation services to prevent the spread of disease;
- providing returning South Sudanese refugees with emergency aid as well as job and livelihoods training.