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IOM Steps up Transport, Aid for South Sudanese as Return Deadline Approaches

IOM has intensified its operations in Upper Nile State - the main
entry point for South Sudanese returning from Sudan - ahead of a
possible April 8th deadline for assisted returns and the upcoming
wet season, which will make roads in the region impassable.

The operations include pre-positioning of non-food relief items,
shelter and sanitation materials, and deploying barges to move
returnees south by river ahead of a possible influx.

At Renk near the border with Sudan, where an estimated 10,000
stranded South Sudanese need urgent transport assistance to reach
their final destinations, IOM is currently loading a barge convoy
to Juba, the South Sudan capital. The barges, which will carry
2,000 people, are expected to leave within the next ten days.

Three more barges carrying over 50 metric tonnes of relief items
and equipment are being loaded at Juba port today, destined for
Upper Nile State. IOM is also increasing the transport assistance
it provides to other agencies to move aid.



Over half a million South Sudanese remaining in the Republic of
Sudan face an uncertain future as the Governments of Sudan and
South Sudan continue to discuss the status of their respective
nationals residing in the two countries.

In February, the two governments concluded an agreement on
voluntary returns from north to south, which recognizes that the
return of individuals is legitimate and should be voluntary.

On March 13, a new agreement giving citizens of the two
countries the right of residence, the right to own property and the
freedom to work and to undertake economic activities in any part of
the two countries, was signed, but is yet to be ratified by either
country.

As South Sudan's geography and infrastructure present challenges
to the development of commercial transport links, returnees are
often stranded in border areas and points of entry into the country
and require government or international assistance to reach their
homes.

The government of South Sudan is committing the equivalent of
US$ 16.6 million towards the return of South Sudanese from
Sudan.

IOM will continue to supplement government efforts by providing
train, road, barge and air transport to vulnerable and stranded
returnees. In March it completed an airlift of over 2,000
vulnerable individuals from Khartoum to Wau, Aweil, and Juba in
South Sudan.

Since August 2011, IOM has transported over 2,000 metric tonnes of
supplies to Upper Nile State. Cargo, typically transported by barge
along the White Nile, includes non-food relief items, shelter
materials, vehicles and fuel.

For more information please contact:

Samantha Donkin

IOM Juba

Tel: +211 922 406728

E-mail: "mailto:sdonkin@iom.int">sdonkin@iom.int