Most
refugees are women and children, the United Nations’ refugee agency said
|
More than 1 million
refugees have fled South Sudan, the United Nations’ refugee agency announced
Friday.
Thomson
Reuters Foundation report continues:
The
number of South Sudanese who have fled their conflict-ridden homeland for
a neighboring country passed one million this week following renewed violence,
the U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) said on Friday.
Most refugees are
women and children, UNHCR spokesman Leo Dobbs told a press briefing in Geneva.
“They
include survivors of violent attacks, sexual assault, children that have been
separated from their parents or traveled alone,” he said in a summary of the
briefing online.
Fighting
erupted in South Sudan at the end of 2013 between soldiers loyal to
President Salva Kiir and those backing his former deputy Riek Machar.
A
peace deal signed in 2015 proved shaky and fresh clashes flared again in the
capital, Juba, in July, raising fears that the five-year-old nation could slide
back into civil war.
More
than 185,000 people have since sought shelter across the border in Uganda,
Ethiopia, Kenya, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Central African Republic,
Dobbs said.
Uganda,
which hosts more than 370,000 South Sudanese, recorded more than 20,000 new
arrivals over the past week alone, bringing the total number
ofrefugees past the one million mark.
“With
this milestone, South Sudan joins Syria, Afghanistan and Somalia as
countries which have produced more than a million refugees,” said Dobbs.
“New
arrivals report increased fighting across the Greater Equatoria region and
attacks by armed groups that kill civilians, loot villages, sexually assault
women and girls, and recruit young boys.”
The
conflict has also fueled hunger and disease in the country of 11 million
people, already one of the world’s poorest.
Last
month, Kiir publicly agreed to accept 4,000 U.N. peacekeepers adding to the
12,000-strong mission already on the ground but on Wednesday U.N. peacekeeping
chief Herve Ladsous said the government had yet to take any action on its
pledge.
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