By Web Desk
Assisting South Sudanese uprooted by communal violence which started on 15 September at the country’s border with Uganda, the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) began distributing relief items this week.
The conflict between communities in Kajo-Keji County and Uganda’s Moyo district left almost 12,000 South Sudanese refugees displaced and forced to return to their country, according to Kajo-Keji County Relief and Rehabilitation Commission Secretary Henry Sokiri,
“I do not have any house in Kajo-Keji,” said Janet Poni, a displaced guardian of five children who had been living in Moyo since 1988.
UNHCR Assistant Safety Advisor in Yei, Joseph Guya, said the agency was carrying out a comprehensive assessment of displaced people’s needs.
“These are people who have been away for years,” he said. “The major challenge is how these families can start a new life.”
Mr. Guya said the displaced people had received items like blankets, cooking utensils, sleeping mats and mosquito nets, clean water and cleaning materials.
A media release from UNHCR also said the agency had been helping with medical referral of sick individuals to the hospital, as well to identify unaccompanied children to facilitate their reunification with family.
The statement noted that UNHCR’s intervention was done in partnership with local authorities, the South Sudan Commission for Refugee Affairs, the Relief and Rehabilitation Commission, non-governmental organizations and local communities.
The host community in Kajo-Keji, Chamber of Commerce and local churches had also provided hot meals. The Kuku community in Juba contributed 14,000 South Sudanese pounds and 500 bags of maize flour.