
MSF staff offload relief items transported by a United Nations helicopter for displaced communities following recent violence. Chuil, Jonglei state, South Sudan, March, 2026 (© Isaac Buay/MSF)
“I have lived through many wars, but this kind of displacement has never happened before,” says Moses, who, at 77 years old, fled his home in Lankien, Jonglei state, South Sudan as conflict intensified. “I have never seen civilians’ homes burned to ashes on such a scale. We are now living under the trees.”
An escalation of violence between government forces and opposition groups in and around Lankien and along the Sobat River in Upper Nile state, in South Sudan’s northeast, has forced tens of thousands of people from their homes. Many families fled on foot, walking for days, to escape attacks and burned villages.
At least 25,000 people have sought refuge in Chuil, Jonglei state, and thousands more are scattered across surrounding villages and swamps. Others have moved to Nyangore and Barmach in Upper Nile, and an additional 28,000 people have arrived in Minkaman, Lakes state. Many have had to flee multiple times. People arrive with nothing and are now living outdoors without any shelter, or in makeshift settlements without adequate food, clean water, or healthcare.
We call for an urgent and coordinated scale-up of other humanitarian groups, to reach people in the hardest-hit areas — especially those still cut off from aid. Zakaria Mwatia, MSF head of mission in South Sudan
“This situation is about life and death,” says Nyamai, a mother of three who is living in an informal displacement site in Chuil. “At one point, we survived by boiling leaves from the trees and eating them.”
“We had nothing else. The needs go beyond hospital care and medicine,” she says. “We need food, water, and shelter. Without these, survival here will not be possible.”
Nyamai, displaced in Chuil, South Sudan “This situation is about life and death. The needs go beyond hospital care and medicine. We need food, water, and shelter. Without these, survival here will not be possible.”
Scaling up activities to support thousands left without care
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is scaling up medical and humanitarian support for people displaced in Chuil and in Ulang county. In Chuil, MSF has upgraded the healthcare centre, increasing capacity to 60 beds to provide emergency care, treatment for malnutrition, maternal health services, and stabilsing trauma cases. Since late February, our teams have provided 2,200 consultations, admitted 172 patients to Chuil healthcare centre, and referred 16 patients for further treatment.
Our teams also distributed relief items – including mosquito nets, blankets, soap, jerry cans, sanitary pads, plastic sheeting, and empty sandbags – to more than 1,500 families to help them cope with the harsh living conditions. More distributions will follow. To help with water and sanitation services, MSF is building 300 latrines and constructing a water purification plant.
Our teams also travel by boat through swamps and rivers to run mobile clinics in Yakuach, Tanakuacha and Pathiel, areas around Chuil. We have provided 1,349 medical consultations and have referred some patients needing higher-level care. More than 70 MSF staff members who were also displaced from Lankien are now supporting the response in Chuil. In the coming weeks, we will establish a health post in Tanakuacha, while our teams will continue running mobile clinics in Yakuach and Pathiel, providing referrals, mental health activities, outpatient consultations, and sexual and reproductive health activities.
Since early March, in Minkaman, Lakes state, MSF has provided 2,210 consultations to new arrivals from Jonglei through mobile clinics. We have also made donations of medical items to Minkaman healthcare centre, and are reinforcing their capacity to respond to disease outbreaks. Our water and sanitation teams have also drilled two boreholes, repaired broken hand pumps, and are renovating the surface water treatment plant and constructing emergency latrines.
Displaced by violence, left without protection
“Humanitarian organisations are increasing activities in Chuil area and in Minkaman, but the response still falls short, and many remote communities remain without lifesaving assistance,” says Zakaria Mwatia, MSF head of mission in South Sudan. “We call for an urgent and coordinated scale-up of other humanitarian groups, to reach people in the hardest-hit areas — especially those still cut off from aid.”
“Without sustained support, the risk of disease outbreaks and further displacement could rapidly escalate into catastrophe,” says Mwatia.
Major gaps remain, particularly in nutrition and water, sanitation, and hygiene, raising the risk of cholera and other waterborne diseases. Screenings in Chuil show alarming malnutrition levels: of 1,263 children under five screened, 54 percent were acutely malnourished. A further 21.5 percent of 609 screened pregnant and breastfeeding women were also acutely malnourished. Referrals of complicated cases remain a challenge as well.
Moses, displaced in Chuil, South Sudan “I have lived through many wars, but this kind of displacement has never happened before. I have never seen civilians’ homes burned to ashes on such a scale. We are now living under the trees.”
Continued attacks on civilians and health facilities
The crisis is unfolding in a region where access to health care was already limited. In 2025, the MSF-supported hospital in Ulang was looted and destroyed, and just last month, Lankien hospital was bombed, closing the two main referral hospitals for the region.
“We are seeing a deeply alarming pattern of attacks on health facilities and health care workers, alongside violence against civilians,” said Tuna Turkmen, MSF emergency project coordinator. “Chuil now hosts a large number of civilians who have fled fighting, including women, children, and elderly people.”
“The town also provides one of the few functioning health facilities in the area, and many aid organisations are coordinating their medical and humanitarian activities from there,” says Turkmen. “It is essential that communities can access these services, and that humanitarian and medical workers can carry out their work safely and without restriction.”
“In swampy areas around Lankien, thousands remain in dire conditions, still waiting for assistance,” continues Turkmen. “People continue to arrive every day. Displaced MSF medical staff there are doing everything they can, but patients die due to lack of medicine. We have requested access from local authorities, so far without success.”
Humanitarian access remains limited and irregular; safe, sustained, uninterrupted access must be guaranteed. MSF calls all parties to the conflict to take all feasible measures to spare civilians from the effects of hostilities. Civilians and civilian infrastructure, including healthcare, must never be targeted; direct attacks against them constitute serious violations of international humanitarian law. Any further escalation of fighting in or around Chuil would have devastating consequences for civilians sheltering there, severely disrupting lifesaving medical and humanitarian assist
Source: https://www.msf.org/displaced-people-northeastern-south-sudan-need-urgent-support
Newer articles:
- South Sudan Vice-President Taban Deng Gai says he hasn’t met President Kiir in nearly a year - 23/03/2026 17:56
- Yei Joint Stars clinch third South Sudan Women’s Cup title - 23/03/2026 17:52
- Sudan drone attack on key hospital killed 64 people during Eid, WHO says - 23/03/2026 17:46
- Polish archaeologists find evidence of legendary king hidden in south Sudan - study - 23/03/2026 17:43
- South Africa engages South Sudan on the latest political developments - 20/03/2026 16:51
Older news items
- 187,000 in South Sudan Risk Losing Life-Saving Services as USD 6 Million Funding Gap Looms - 20/03/2026 16:42
- UN pays tribute to Fink Haysom, a ‘tireless peacemaker’ and advocate for democracy - 20/03/2026 16:23
- Civil Alliance in South Sudan: President Must Be Physically and Mentally Checked - 18/03/2026 12:14
- 'Fire came from the sky and burned them' - life on the brink of civil war in South Sudan - 18/03/2026 12:10
- Sudan conflict spreads across region as needs outpace aid, Red Cross warns - 18/03/2026 12:03
Latest news items (all categories):
- South Sudan sets 22 December for country's long-delayed first-ever election - 23/06/2026 15:44
- Ambassador Enarsson Backs Campaign to End Sexual Violence in Conflict at Juba Advocacy Event - 23/06/2026 15:41
- Rampant Junior Starlets crush South Sudan to clinch CECAFA bronze - 23/06/2026 15:26
- Validating Progress Towards Closing Immunity Gaps in South Sudan - 23/06/2026 15:23
- تحديد موعد أول انتخابات في تاريخ جنوب السودان - 23/06/2026 15:14
See also (all categories):
Random articles (all categories):
- On South Sudan highways, truck drivers face the ‘Wild West’ - 10/04/2021 02:15
- Regional bloc invites S.Sudan rivals to Addis talks - 25/04/2019 22:08
- sudan-mssacre-reuters-042214.jpg.JPG - 22/04/2014 12:00
- Sudan's Forgotten War - Daily Beast - 13/11/2012 04:51
- South Sudan's Upper Nile Scene of Refugee Influx - Voice of America - 07/06/2012 14:14
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 146567 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 27534 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 24695 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 24028 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 21907 times