IOM: fighting blocks humanitarian assistance in Upper Nile

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) said it has been forced to suspend humanitarian activities in Wau Shilluk in South Sudan’s Upper Nile area due to violent clashes over the weekend putting thousands at risk.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) said it has been forced to suspend humanitarian activities in Wau Shilluk in South Sudan’s Upper Nile area due to violent clashes over the weekend putting thousands at risk.

IOM said in a Tuesday statement seen by Radio Tamazuj that due to increased insecurity, it has had to postpone the registration of nearly 3,000 thousand vulnerable individuals for humanitarian assistance indefinitely.

“Violence in Upper Nile has once again hindered the ability of IOM and other relief agencies to provide assistance to populations seriously in need,” said IOM South Sudan Chief of Mission William Barriga. “Civilians will undoubtedly suffer as sporadic fighting makes it more difficult for aid workers to deliver services.”

The international organization pointed out that clashes between government and opposition forces began south of Wau Shilluk on 25 January and continued to spread in the direction of Wau Shilluk and Malakal town.

The agency added that the shelling gradually grew closer to Wau Shilluk on 27 January just as the 14-person IOM team was about to resume registration, forcing staff to evacuate to safer areas with the support of World Vision, which provides humanitarian aid in the area.

It noted that an estimated 2,000 to 3,000 people remained to be registered when the team was forced to evacuate. Between 16–26 January, 20,446 people were registered or verified as previously registered last year, according to IOM.

“Maintaining accurate registration information informs more accurate response planning and tracking of displacement trends in the volatile Upper Nile region” partly reads the statement.

The organization indicated that displacement patterns in this area have remained fluid in recent years, saying July and August 2015 saw a rapid influx of IDPs travelling from Wau Shilluk to the Malakal PoC site due to deteriorating conditions in Wau Shilluk following months of limited humanitarian access.

The agency estimates that between 12 November and 30 December more than 2,000 people left the Malakal PoC site to travel to Wau Shilluk to re-join family members, cultivate land or proceed on to refugee camps in Sudan. Only 60 percent of these indicated that they intended to leave permanently, according to IOM.

Wau Shilluk is located across the White Nile River from Malakal town, one of South Sudan’s largest urban areas before the current crisis and home to more than 33,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) who are sheltering at the protection of civilians (PoC) site.

Photo: IOM staff assess water points as IDPs flee fighting in the Malakal PoC site. IOM/2016