Download Infographic (PDF | 2.11 MB | English version)
In December, humanitarian access remained difficult due to escalating hostilities, heightened militarization, and expanding bureaucratic interference. The operating environment was most severely affected in Jonglei, Upper Nile, Unity, and Western Bahr el Ghazal States, with conflict dynamics and administrative pressure increasingly converging to restrict humanitarian presence, movement, and programme delivery.
In Upper Nile State, insecurity and access constraints significantly disrupted life-saving assistance. Food distributions for approximately 40,000 conflict-affected people in Baliet and Nasir counties were delayed due to illegal taxation imposed on UN-contracted service providers, affecting planned movement of 800 metric tons of assistance along the Sobat corridor. In Nasir County, county and state authorities ordered the withdrawal of humanitarian staff, resulting in the evacuation of six NGO staff and the suspension of December food distributions, with commodities temporarily confiscated pending access negotiations.
Violence, intimidation, and threats against humanitarian personnel, facilities, and assets continued throughout the month. In Jonglei and Upper Nile States, local authorities forcibly entered NGO compounds and confiscated equipment. Along riverine routes in Canal/Pigi County, seven contracted commercial boats were detained at checkpoints, with demands of SSP 1 million per boat, disrupting humanitarian logistics along the Sobat River. December also recorded a serious aviation security incident, when an armed individual hijacked a humanitarian aircraft at Wau Airport, highlighting growing risks to air operations. Criminal incidents—including armed robberies, burglaries, and theft of humanitarian and personal assets—were reported in Juba, Renk, Bor, Wau, Pibor, and Aweil, further increasing staff security concerns.
Bureaucratic and administrative impediments intensified, particularly in Ulang county in Upper Nile State. Authorities suspended staff from at least seven NGOs and three UN-affiliated partners over alleged recruitment malpractice, often despite prior approvals from State or National Ministries of Labour. Additional constraints included mandatory advertisement fees of 10,000 SSP per position, renewed demands for county-level registration with fees of up to USD 200, restrictive recruitment directives, and new requirements for staff to collect work permits in person. In Renk and Ulang Counties, NGOs were instructed to submit detailed staff lists, payroll records, asset inventories, and 2026 workplans, with warnings that non-compliance could lead to suspension of operations.
In Jonglei State, South Sudan People's Defence Forces orders issued in late December in anticipation of major military operations resulted in the relocation of humanitarian staff from Duk, Uror, Akobo, Nyirol, and Fangak Counties, with a number of NGOs relocating personnel to Juba, effectively suspending field activities and programme implementation across large areas.
Source: https://reliefweb.int/report/south-sudan/south-sudan-humanitarian-access-snapshot-december-2025
Newer articles:
- South Sudan Steps Up Efforts to Expand Electricity Supply in Juba - 23/01/2026 13:57
- South Sudan After the Pilgrimage: When Moral Attention Isn’t Enough - 21/01/2026 17:48
- South Sudan Erupts - 21/01/2026 17:44
- South Sudan president fires interior minister, sparking fears of peace deal collapse - 21/01/2026 17:39
- DRC, South Sudan Exchange Prisoners to Boost Security Cooperation - 21/01/2026 17:32
Older news items
- Hybrid Court Delay Betrays South Sudan's Victims of Airstrikes - 19/01/2026 12:33
- UN Commission urges immediate political de-escalation as renewed fighting in Jonglei puts civilians at grave risk - 19/01/2026 12:29
- South Sudan Mine Action Delegation Learns About Mine Action at CMAC - 19/01/2026 12:23
- Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations Visits South Sudan - 19/01/2026 12:19
- South Sudan FA announce financial support for Premier League clubs - 19/01/2026 12:14
Latest news items (all categories):
- Conflict, hunger push South Sudan families to eat leaves to stay alive - 10/06/2026 12:41
- Somali referee returns home to hero’s welcome after World Cup heartbreak - 10/06/2026 12:38
- Belfast’s Sudanese community hunkers down after grisly attack - 10/06/2026 12:32
- World Bank calls for action as South Sudan’s cities rapidly expand - 10/06/2026 12:30
- Sudan, South Sudan and Uganda should brace for heavy rains between June and August 2026 - 10/06/2026 12:27
See also (all categories):
Random articles (all categories):
- Feature: ‘Letters from Isohe’: An elderly English woman’s memoirs about teaching in South Sudan - 25/03/2022 03:29
- AU, IGAD gravely concerned as tensions escalate in South Sudan - 28/03/2025 10:23
- Opening remarks of Timo Olkkonen, EU Ambassador in South Sudan, at the validation workshop of the Judicial Reform Committee (JRC) - findings and recommendations - 24/10/2024 11:10
- we are back online - 19/06/2008 10:26
- South Sudan sees northern border zone within a month - Yahoo! News (blog) - 07/01/2013 17:00
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 145591 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 27378 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 24573 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 23937 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 21802 times
