Refugees in South Sudan
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South Sudan Unity

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35,200 Individuals
Registered Refugee Population
Base Layer

Population

This map does not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations

Registered Refugee Population

73,307


Households*

18,228


* Household and detailed Sex/Age data may be unavailable or based on estimates for some locations
Last Updated 15 May 2013
Source - UNHCR

Demography
Male (46%) Age (54%) Female
12% 0 - 4 11%
13% 5 - 11 14%
7% 12 - 17 8%
12% 18 - 59 20%
1% 60 + 1%

  Estimated Population by Date

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  Arrivals

  Breakdown by Settlement

Settlement Current Total    
71,558
17,633
Individuals
Households
97.6 %
962
249
Individuals
Households
1.3 %
787
346
Individuals
Households
1.1 %
n/a
n/a
Individuals
Households
0 %

  Breakdown by Country of Origin

Country of Origin Current Total    
73,307
18,228
Individuals
Households
100 %

   Latest Documents

Report Date: 17/10/2011
Description
Unity state confronts a set of challenges unparalleled in South Sudan. Some exemplify concerns that register across the emerging republic; others are unique to the state. Situated abreast multiple frontiers, its political, social, economic and security dilemmas make for a perfect storm. Some have festered for years, while more recent developments – prompted by the partition of the “old” Sudan – have exacerbated instability and intensified resource pressure. Recent rebel militia activity has drawn considerable attention to the state, highlighting internal fractures and latent grievances. But the fault lines in Unity run deeper than the rebellions. A governance crisis – with a national subtext – has polarized state politics and sown seeds of discontent. Territorial disputes, cross-border tensions, economic isolation, development deficits and a still tenuous North-South relationship also fuel instability, each one compounding the next amid a rapidly evolving post-independence environment. Juba, and its international partners, must marshal attention and resources toward the fundamental sources of instability in places like Unity if the emerging Republic is to realize its full potential.
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  Highlights

15/05/2013: Paryang camp is officially closed, all Refugees were relocated over the past three days to Ajuong Thok without any significant problem.
15 May 2013
Today a 16th convoy took place. 105 individuals have been moved from Yida and 91 individuals transferred from Pariang students camp to Ajoung Thok.
13 May 2013
UNHCR facilitated a meeting between Yida Refugee Leaders and the Chiefs of villages near Ajuong Thok, the site of the new refugee camp UNHCR will open in March.
24 Jan 2013

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