UN airdrops food aid in S.Sudan to people hit by conflict

Grains transported by the World Food Programme (WFP) from a warehouse in Port Sudan. (AFP)
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Updated 07 July 2025
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UN airdrops food aid in S.Sudan to people hit by conflict

  • Across South Sudan, 7.7 million people, or 57 percent of the population, face “crisis, emergency or catastrophic” levels of hunger

NAIROBI: The World Food Programme said Monday it had airdropped food aid to help tens of thousands of people in remote parts of South Sudan where surging conflict has pushed some communities “to the brink of famine.”

The unstable east African nation has seen a drastic uptick in violence since simmering rivalry between President Salva Kiir and his vice president Riek Machar boiled over into open hostilities in March.

The tensions raised fears of a return to full-scale war in the impoverished country, the world’s youngest, where a civil war killed some 400,000 people in 2013-2018.

“These distributions mark WFP’s first access in over four months to deliver life-saving food and nutrition assistance to more than 40,000 people... in the most remote parts of Nasir and Ulang counties, areas only accessible by air,” the United Nations agency said in a statement.

More than one million people across Upper Nile state — which borders war-torn Sudan — face acute hunger, including over 32,000 people already experiencing “catastrophic” levels of hunger, the WFP warned, adding the figure had tripled since conflict flared, triggering mass displacement.

Fighting has blocked main river routes, which are the most cost-effective way to reach large swathes of Upper Nile and northern Jonglei state to deliver assistance, the UN agency added.

Across South Sudan, 7.7 million people, or 57 percent of the population, face “crisis, emergency or catastrophic” levels of hunger, it said.

A funding shortfall has forced the WFP to prioritize assistance with reduced rations for only the most vulnerable 2.5 million people.

The agency has appealed for $274 million to continue life-saving operations through December.


UN Palestinian refugee agency says demolished HQ set on fire

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UN Palestinian refugee agency says demolished HQ set on fire

  • UNRWA described the blaze as part of an “ongoing attempt to dismantle the status of Palestine Refugees”
  • Its compound in Israeli-occupied East Jerusalem has been empty of staff since January 2025

JERUSALEM: The United Nations’ agency for Palestinian refugees said Sunday that its partially demolished headquarters in occupied East Jerusalem was set on fire.
The agency, UNRWA, did not offer details on the cause of the incident at their premises, which Israeli authorities seized and began dismantling last week after banning the organization from operating in the country in 2025.
“After having been stormed and demolished by the Israeli authorities, the UNRWA Headquarters in occupied East Jerusalem has now been set on fire,” the agency said in a statement.
It described the blaze as part of an “ongoing attempt to dismantle the status of Palestine Refugees.”
The fire and rescue service said early Sunday that it had responded to a call at the facility, where it was working to “extinguish the blaze and prevent it from spreading,” also without offering a cause.
The UN had slammed last week’s seizure and demolitions, and UNRWA insisted that its property remained protected by the privileges and immunities of the UN, a view it repeated on Sunday.
“Like any UN Member State anywhere in the world, without exception, Israel is legally obliged to protect and respect UN facilities,” UNRWA spokesman Jonathan Fowler told AFP on Sunday.
UNRWA was created specifically for the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians displaced during the creation of Israel in 1948, and provides refugee status registration and health and education services.
Its compound in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem has been empty of staff since January 2025, when the law banning its operations took effect.
Israel accuses UNRWA of providing cover for Hamas militants, and a series of investigations found “neutrality-related issues” at the agency but held that Israel had not provided conclusive evidence.
UNRWA still operates in the occupied West Bank and Gaza.