Sudan’s children caught in conflict
Children in Sudan, having endured 500 days of harrowing conflict, are now dying of hunger. The IPC have declared that parts of Sudan are now experiencing famine, a near unfathomable level of hunger that condemns 2 in every 10,000 people to death every single day. Children are often the first to die.
Together with the Sudanese diaspora and other humanitarian organisations, Plan International Australia is calling on Foreign Minister Penny Wong to urgently provide $50 million in new and additional funding to the humanitarian catastrophe occurring in Sudan.
Will you join us?
In April last year, conflict erupted in Sudan between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), and since then, more than ten million people have been driven from their homes.
Almost 25 million people are in desperate need of humanitarian assistance – close to the equivalent of Australia’s entire population.
The situation is truly dire. Hunger, violence and targeted mass atrocities have given way to mass graves, and survivors are struggling to hold on.
How is Plan International responding?
Together with local partners, we’ve been building shelters, distributing cash assistance, clean water, food and other essential supplies, as well as providing child protection, psychosocial support and education.
In Renk, Plan South Sudan has:
- Constructed five temporary shelters and three semi-permanent shelters which, to date, have hosted a total of 22,700 refugees
- Distributed non-food items like soap, buckets, mosquito nets, water treating tablets, and sleeping mats to 11,280 individuals
- Provided cash assistance to 4,678 individuals
- Reached 16,372 individuals with water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services
- Provided child-friendly spaces for children and life skill sessions for 506 children.
Emergency response in Malakal
After the Sudan crisis began in April 2023, Plan South Sudan immediately began responding to the needs of the people that arrived in Malakal from May 2023 to date by:
- Providing cash assistance to 175 unaccompanied and separated children
- Distributing 296 dignity kits to girls and young women
- Providing 8,563 children with psychosocial support and recreational activities.