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Sudan Tribune

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Juba, Khartoum extend agreement on humanitarian aid

January 10, 2016 (KHARTOUM) – Sudan, South Sudan and the World Food Programme (WFP) Sunday have signed an extension of the agreement on the transit of humanitarian aid from Sudan to South Sudan for another six months until the end of June.

WFP's field officer Gabriel Ajak talking to people displaced in Pibor County, January 20, 2012 (ST)
WFP’s field officer Gabriel Ajak talking to people displaced in Pibor County, January 20, 2012 (ST)
Juba and Khartoum signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in July 2014 to allow the expedition of aid across the borders and through river transportation to feed thousands of impacted civilians in South Sudan.

Sudan’s foreign ministry spokesperson Ali al-Sadiq told Sudan Tribune that Sudan agreed to deliver the humanitarian aid to South Sudan through its territory in appreciation of the needy population in the neighbouring country.

He pointed that his country seeks to alleviate the suffering of the South Sudanese affected by the ongoing conflict in the newborn state.

The signing of the extension was attended by the representative of the WFP in Sudan, the United Nations resident representative in Khartoum, Sudan’s foreign ministry representative and Sudan’s humanitarian aid commissioner.

It is worth to mention that the implementation of the agreement is overseen by the joint technical committee for the transit of humanitarian assistance from Sudan to South Sudan including representatives from the governments of Sudan and South Sudan and the WFP.

The violence which erupted in South Sudan in December 2013 has produced one of the world’s largest humanitarian emergencies with 2.3 million people forced to flee their homes, 650,000 of these across borders as refugees and 1.65 million displaced inside the country.

The roughly 30 per cent of the population is mainly concentrated in the troubled Unity, Upper Nile and Jonglei states which are not far from the Sudanese border.

(ST)

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