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Upcoming rains and aid cuts could further hamper humanitarian efforts and push millions of people to famine

“We are already witnessing clashes between armed groups from South Sudan and Sudan. This volatile situation is simmering like a volcano ready to erupt any minute. Unless the fighting stops and the humanitarian crisis is addressed, the situation could quickly turn into a full-blown regional catastrophe.”

Fati N’Zi-Hassane,
Oxfam in Africa Director
Contact information:

Fatuma Noor, in Nairobi | Fatuma.Noor@oxfam.org | +254 723 944682

Simon Trépanier, in Italy | Simon.Trepanier@oxfam.org | +39 388 850 9970

Nesrine Aly in UK | Nesrine.Aly@oxfam.org | +447503989838

 

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Notes to editors:
  • Read “The Unravelling of the World’s Largest Humanitarian Disaster: From the Sahel to the Red Sea”. The report is jointly endorsed by Sudan and South Sudan Forum, Inter Agency Working group (IAWG) for East and central Africa and Forum des ONG en Afrique de l'Ouest et centrale (FONGI)
  • Oxfam is supporting 150,000 people fleeing the conflict to Renk, South Sudan, and has reached 94,562 refugees in the Eastern part of Chad with lifesaving clean water, hygiene facilities and cash.
  • Sudan currently accounts for 1 in 8 internally displaced persons (IDPs) worldwide [FN1] and 1 in 13 refugees globally, making it the world’s largest displacement crisis.
  • Sudan war has left 4.8 million people [NA2] across neighbouring countries (Egypt, Libya, South Sudan, Chad, Ethiopia and Uganda) in urgent need of humanitarian assistance. This is up from 1.8 million in mid-2023, more than the double.
  • Despite funding needs, only a third of the  Regional Refugee Response Plan was met last year.
  • In South Sudan, the number of people needing assistance has more than doubled over the past decade—from 4.1 million in 2015 to 9 million in 2025 while in Chad, one in three people - about 7 million people need assistance in 2025.
  • The UN appeal for Sudan Humanitarian Response Plan for 2025 was US$ 434.5 million. Only 10 percent of this amount has been funded according to the UNOCHA Financial Tracking Service portal.
  • Approximately $64 million USAID funding for Chad and South Sudan in 2025 has been cut. Source:  The Center for Global Development.
  • In December 2024, the Famine Review Committee (FRC) classified a Famine (IPC Phase 5) in five areas in Sudan: Zamzam, Abu Shouk and Al Salam camps in Al Fasher locality and in the Western Nuba Mountains. It also projected that Famine would expand to five additional areas by May 2025.