Hit by fighting and famine, 1.5m flee South Sudan

People who fled fighting in South Sudan arrive at Bidi Bidi refugee camp in Yumbe district, Uganda. (Reuters)
Updated 03 March 2017
Follow

Hit by fighting and famine, 1.5m flee South Sudan

KAMPALA: Some 1.5 million refugees have fled fighting and famine in South Sudan to neighboring countries, half of them to Uganda, and thousands more are leaving daily, the UN refugee agency said on Thursday.
Political rivalry between South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir and his former deputy Riek Machar ignited a civil war in 2013 that has often followed ethnic lines.
The two signed a shaky peace deal in 2015, but fighting has continued and Machar fled in July after days of clashes between soldiers loyal to him and Kiir’s forces in the capital Juba. He is now in South Africa.
Charlie Yaxley, spokesman for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Uganda, said the agency estimated the total number of South Sudanese who have gone to neighboring countries at 1.5 million, half in Uganda.
In December there were an estimated 600,000 South Sudanese who had arrived in Uganda. Yaxley said there were thousands of new arrivals every day. The UNHCR had planned for 300,000 this year.
“We have already in the first two months of this year received 120,00 new arrivals. If this rate of inflow continues actually that figure for 2017 will be far higher,” Yaxley said.
Refugees arriving in Uganda often say they are fleeing from ethnic violence.
“I was in Invepi ... and almost every refugee I spoke to had either seen a friend or family member killed in front of their eyes,” Yaxley said, referring to the latest refugee settlement set up in Uganda.
Violence has prevented many farmers from harvesting crops and the scarcity of food has been compounded by hyperinflation, triggering famine in parts of South Sudan.
The UNHCR says the refugee crisis is the world’s third largest after Syria’s and Afghanistan’s.


US police investigate after a car rams NY Jewish center

Updated 7 sec ago
Follow

US police investigate after a car rams NY Jewish center

  • New York police are investigating a possible hate crime after a car crashed into an Orthodox Jewish center on Wednesday, the city’s police commissioner said
NEW YORK: New York police are investigating a possible hate crime after a car crashed into an Orthodox Jewish center on Wednesday, the city’s police commissioner said.
Officers arrested a man after he repeatedly drove into the rear door of the Chabad-Lubavitch World Headquarters in Brooklyn, New York Police Commissionner Jessica Tisch told reporters Wednesday.
Footage shared online shows the driver ram into the door of the building, before he reverses and plows into it again.
No injuries were reported, Tisch said.
The police has “significantly increased security” around places of worship, including counter terror and bomb squad deployments, she added.
New York, home to the largest Jewish population outside Israel, is on a high alert amid a spike in reports of antisemitic attacks.
The city’s mayor Zohran Mamdani said the crash was “deeply alarming.”
“Any threat to a Jewish institution or place of worship must be taken seriously. Antisemitism has no place in our city, and violence or intimidation against Jewish New Yorkers is unacceptable,” he wrote on X.