
ARUA, Uganda — The flood of South Sudanese refugees from the country’s 5-year civil war has been called a children’s crisis.
More than 60 percent of the well over 1 million refugees who have poured into neighboring Uganda are younger than 18, government and United Nations officials say. More than 2 million people have fled South Sudan overall.
Amid the fighting, over 75,000 children have found themselves on their own in Uganda and other neighboring countries, according to the U.N. refugee agency, separated from their families in the chaos or sent by their parents to relative safety.
While many children have reunited with relatives after crossing the border, others are matched by aid workers with foster families in an effort to minimize the disruption in their lives. Without parents, some children are left vulnerable to exploitation and abuse, aid workers say.
Some teenagers find themselves the head of their households, taking care of siblings. One 16-year-old boy now takes care of his younger brother. “My father was shot in the war,” he said. “And then my mother, I don’t know where she went.” He doesn’t know if she’s dead or alive.
Efforts to support the children have been hurt by a recent scandal in Uganda in which officials were accused of inflating refugee numbers to siphon off aid money. That has shaken international donors. Aid workers say resources are stretched thin.
One young mother of two, Beatrice Tumalu, now takes care of eight other children who are not her own.
“I feel pity for them,” she said, as she grew up under similar circumstances during the years that South Sudan fought for independence from Sudan. That independence was won in 2011, and South Sudan’s civil war broke out two years later.
The unaccompanied children have little of that aid workers call psychosocial support to help deal with trauma. In one refugee settlement just six case workers are available for 78,000 children, according to the Danish Refugee Council.
Another 16-year-old said his parents died three years ago in South Sudan. He walked into Uganda last year and was placed with a foster family.
Sitting against a tree, he opened the Bible he carried with him and began to cry as he read one passage: “I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you.”
Adelle Kalakouti is an Associated Press writer.
Newer articles:
- Chinese-built electricity poles plant inaugurated in South Sudan - 16/04/2018 19:51
- South Sudan opposition give six conditions to government - 16/04/2018 13:06
- Utah midwife returns from war-torn South Sudan a changed person - 16/04/2018 10:49
- South Sudan: One of just two executing states in sub-Saharan Africa in 2017 - 16/04/2018 03:10
- AU delegation in South Sudan for peace in world’s youngest nation - 16/04/2018 00:25
Older news items
- South Sudan rebels say they have freed seven aid workers - 15/04/2018 11:38
- South Sudan army chief ill, seeks treatment abroad - 15/04/2018 05:50
- South Sudan's Refugee Flow Is Often a Children's Crisis - 15/04/2018 04:03
- Activist urges AUPSC to push for Hybrid Court on S. Sudan - 15/04/2018 02:35
- South Sudan: African Union PSC embark on peace move - 14/04/2018 18:00
Latest news items (all categories):
- Violence in South Sudan is rising again: what’s different this time, and how to avoid civil war - 19/03/2025 13:47
- 50,000 residents displaced by violence in South Sudan - 19/03/2025 13:44
- International community offers to facilitate South Sudan peace talks - 19/03/2025 13:40
- Poor Advisor—Bad Decision—Scenario 56' - 19/03/2025 13:37
- مالك عقار: بين نضال الأمس وخيانة الشعب الجنوب سوداني - 19/03/2025 13:27
Random articles (all categories):
- As Ambassador Haley Visits South Sudan Tomorrow, Enough Project Urges Financial Pressures on Leaders to Address Crisis - 24/10/2017 18:05
- Saudi, UAE join foreign pressure to overturn Sudan’s coup - 04/11/2021 06:01
- African Union objects to any unilateral actions on Abyei - 25/09/2013 00:59
- Joint UNMISS and state government forum in Malakal leads to action plan for peaceful coexistence from five counties - 12/04/2022 11:10
- Yuot Alaak trained to be a child soldier, until his father's determination led him to a brighter future - 08/08/2020 01:56
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 82678 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 22502 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 21796 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 20008 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 19370 times