Half of South Sudan in acute hunger while aid at lowest ever

An aerial view shows a section of the Protection of Civilian site (PoC) 3 site in the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) compound outside Juba, South Sudan, July 12, 2018. (REUTERS)
Short Url
Updated 26 November 2025
Follow

Half of South Sudan in acute hunger while aid at lowest ever

  • Massive corruption by elites stealing South Sudan’s oil wealth, documented by the United Nations, has left the country with almost no basic services

NAIROBI: Nearly half the population in South Sudan, the world’s youngest country, faces acute hunger and has never received so little aid, Oxfam said Wednesday.
The UK-based charity said only 40 percent of South Sudan’s $1.6 billion humanitarian plan for 2025 had been received as Western nations slash aid budgets.
Nearly six million South Sudanese are suffering acute hunger and have little access to clean water and sanitation, Oxfam said, and this was expected to reach 7.5 million by April.
Massive corruption by elites stealing South Sudan’s oil wealth, documented by the United Nations, has left the country with almost no basic services.
“It is as though the world is turning its back on those who need help the most, at the very moment when their survival hangs in the balance,” said Shabnam Baloch, Oxfam’s South Sudan country director in a statement.
South Sudan gained independence in 2011 but soon after suffered five years of devastating civil war, leaving more than two million displaced, and there are fears of renewed conflict this year as a peace agreement unravels.
It is also hosting hundreds of thousands of refugees from the war in neighboring Sudan.
Up to 1,000 people a day arrive daily at transit centers in the border town of Renk but Oxfam is being forced to scale down operations there by 70 percent over the next month, and said it would halt work entirely without new funding secured by February.
 

 


Flash floods kill 21 in Moroccan coastal town

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Flash floods kill 21 in Moroccan coastal town

RABAT: Flash-flooding caused by sudden, heavy rain killed at least 21 people in the Moroccan coastal town of Safi on Sunday, local authorities said.
Images on social media showed a torrent of muddy water sweeping cars and rubbish bins from the streets in Safi, which sits around 300 kilometers (186 miles) south of the capital Rabat.
At least 70 homes and businesses in the historic old city were flooded, authorities said.
Another 32 people were injured and taken to hospital, but most of them have been discharged.

Damage to roads cut off traffic along several routes to and from the port city on the Atlantic coast.
“It’s a black day,” resident Hamza Chdouani told AFP.
By evening, the water level had receded, leaving people to pick through a mud-sodden landscape to salvage belongings.
Another resident, Marouane Tamer, questioned why government trucks had not been dispatched to pump out the water.
As teams searched for other possible casualties, the weather service forecast more heavy rain on Tuesday across the country.
Severe weather and flooding are not uncommon in Morocco, which is struggling with a severe drought for the seventh consecutive year.
The General Directorate of Meteorology (DGM) said 2024 was Morocco’s hottest year on record, while registering an average rainfall deficit of -24.7 percent.
Moroccan autumns are typically marked by a gradual drop in temperatures, but climate change has affected weather patterns and made storms more intense because a warmer atmosphere holds more moisture and warmer seas can turbocharge the systems.