Office of the Spokesperson
Department of State
Washington, DC
September 29, 2014
Today, Assistant Secretary Anne C. Richard announced nearly $83
million in additional emergency assistance for refugees and internally
displaced persons (IDPs) in South Sudan and South Sudanese refugees in
Ethiopia, Kenya, Sudan, and Uganda. The additional funding was announced
at the annual meeting of the Office of the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees’ governing Executive Committee in Geneva. With this
announcement, the total U.S. emergency assistance for the South Sudan
crisis in fiscal year 2014 is more than $720 million.
Conflict in South Sudan threatens to create a famine in a country
where more than two million people are already facing crisis or
emergency levels of food insecurity and tens of thousands of children
are at risk of malnutrition-related death. Without progress on political
negotiations, the end of the current rainy season is likely to bring a
new, intensified chapter of fighting and displacement. With over 450,000
new South Sudanese refugees since December 2013, there are now more
refugees than when the Comprehensive Peace Agreement ended Sudan’s long
civil war in 2005. An additional 200,000 South Sudanese are expected to
flee to neighboring countries by the end of the year.
The United States remains committed to the people of South Sudan.
This latest U.S. contribution will allow both international and
non-governmental organizations to provide refugees and IDPs with basic
life support such as access to clean water and sanitation; food, health
care, and essential household items; gender-based violence prevention
and response; critical services to treat malnutrition; distribution of
seeds, tools, and livelihood support kits; employment training; and
programs to protect children, including education and efforts to reunite
families torn apart by displacement.
While the United States is striving to do all we can to help, we urge
other donors to continue to respond and similarly ramp up assistance to
prevent the worst consequences of this conflict. Most importantly, the
United States calls on all parties to the conflict to end the violence
and allow immediate and unconditional access for humanitarian workers to
reach people in need across all areas of South Sudan. Gains made
through international assistance can only be sustained if leaders
prioritize peace and invest in services for their own people.
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