KHARTOUM: Thousands of ethnic South Sudanese have been flown to South Sudan in a major airlift that entered its second week on Monday, the International Organization for Migration said.
"As of the end of yesterday we have airlifted about 3,600," an IOM officer told AFP.
She said the number of daily charter flights between Khartoum and the South Sudanese capital Juba has doubled to four since the operation began on May 14, and could peak at six in coming days.
The agency is planning to fly a total of 12,000 Southerners who have been staying at the Kosti way-station 300 kilometers (190 miles) from Khartoum.
Kosti became home to the biggest single concentration of South Sudanese needing transport South, with many living in makeshift shelters or barn-like buildings for up to a year, and dependent on foreign aid.
The governor of the Kosti area declared the migrants a threat to security and the environment and ordered them out by May 5, sparking concern from the United Nations and the IOM which has already helped thousands of South Sudanese head South.
Officials extended the deadline to May 20 but then told IOM to disregard the time limit after plans for the airlift were devised.
"We should be able to finish up by the end of the month," said the IOM officer, declining to be named. "It's going pretty well".
She said the agency, which depends on donor funding, has now received commitments for all of the roughly $5.5 million cost of the airlift.
The South Sudanese in Kosti are among about 350,000 ethnic Southerners who the South Sudanese embassy estimates remain in the north after an April 8 deadline to either formalize their status in the north or leave the country.
Many have spent their entire lives in the north or came to Sudan when they were children, as millions fled a 22-year civil war. The war ended in a 2005 peace deal which led to South Sudan's independence last July.
Hundreds of thousands made their way from Sudan to South Sudan ahead of the separation or in subsequent months.
Most of the Southerners in Kosti did not have their own means to arrange transportation, said IOM, which planned to move thousands of them by barge until Sudan's military expressed security concerns.
In March and April Sudan and South Sudan fought a border war, raising fears of wider conflict amid a climate of heightened nationalism in the north.
A UN Security Council resolution on May 2 ordered both sides to cease hostilities and to resume negotiations on unresolved issues including the status of each country's nationals in the other country.
Newer articles:
- SG at NATO Summit; Syria; Security Council; Sudan/South Sudan; and more - UN Dispatch - 22/05/2012 00:00
- Back to school, despite Sudanese violence - 89.3 KPCC - 21/05/2012 23:01
- Good Day :A Message from South Sudan to US! - Sudan Vision - 21/05/2012 21:39
- McCook native now working in South Sudan - McCook Daily Gazette - 21/05/2012 19:04
- South Sudan: Unaccompanied children begin to arrive at SOS Shelters - Reuters AlertNet - 21/05/2012 12:59
Older news items
- KENYA-SUDAN-SOUTH SUDAN: Back in Kakuma camp again - IRINnews.org - 21/05/2012 09:32
- African Markets - Factors to watch on May 21 - Reuters - 21/05/2012 07:03
- Arab League Reinforces Support for Sudan - Examiner.com - 21/05/2012 06:00
- UN deminers captured by Sudan army freed: minister - Daily Nation - 20/05/2012 18:00
- Sudan releases four detained foreigners - officials - swissinfo.ch - 20/05/2012 15:12
Latest news items (all categories):
- INTERNAL MEMO - Appeal For Unity And Renewal Within The SPLM/A-IO - 08/06/2026 23:12
- The Tribal Marketplace: How Ethnic Associations are Capitalizing on the South Sudanese State - 08/06/2026 16:12
- Breaking The Evil Political Dominance - 08/06/2026 16:09
- African Professional Summit 2026 to Convene Leaders, Innovators, and Change-Makers in Lagos - 08/06/2026 16:05
- Reformation meets growth with the Green Corrections Initiative in South Sudan - 08/06/2026 15:57
See also (all categories):
Random articles (all categories):
- South Sudanese Women Are Making Moonshine To Survive - 20/01/2017 14:08
- South Sudan, Sudan to Keep Oil Flowing, Industry is the “Glue that Binds” Two Nations - 15/04/2019 23:37
- South Sudan: We have lost everything - 14/03/2014 17:44
- South Sudan has its first female Speaker of Parliament - 24/07/2021 09:48
- Keep focus on South Sudan, UN mission chief tells Security Council - 15/12/2020 23:02
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 145531 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 27358 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 24567 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 23930 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 21789 times