Sudan violence forces at least 450,000 children to flee their homes - UNICEF
NEW YORK/AMMAN/NAIROBI/DAKAR, 11 May 2023 – UNICEF is stepping up humanitarian support for children on the move affected by the ongoing conflict in Sudan. As violence continues, an estimated 82,000 children have fled to neighbouring countries and approximately 368,000 more are newly displaced inside the country.
According to UNHCR, more than 164,000 people have sought refuge across borders since 15 April, including in the Central African Republic, Chad, Egypt, Ethiopia, Libya and South Sudan. In addition, IOM estimates some 736,000 people are newly internally displaced within Sudan since the start of the conflict. Almost 3.8 million people were internally displaced within Sudan prior to the outbreak of violence.
“The brutal conflict in Sudan has exacted a devastating toll on the country’s children,” said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell. “Thousands have experienced deeply traumatic events or been driven from their homes in search of relative safety. Their situation remains precarious, and continued support and assistance from the international community and humanitarian partners are critical.”
In Sudan, UNICEF has provided emergency health kits, essential supplies and medicines to hospitals and primary healthcare centres to support the treatment of the injured and access to life-saving and basic health services. UNICEF is also supporting displaced children and families, striving to ensure the continuity of essential services, including the provision of nutrition supplies to help keep more than 80 per cent of facilities functioning in affected areas. UNICEF interventions will also support the provision of urgent assistance to newly displaced children and families and affected host communities in the states where conflict spread remains limited and with the largest number of internally displaced. This week, a UNICEF shipment of water, sanitation and hygiene supplies landed in Port Sudan, with further shipments scheduled in the days ahead.
UNICEF is also working closely with governments and partner organisations in neighbouring countries to step up essential life-saving services and support to these vulnerable children. This support includes:
- Provision of safe water through water trucking, water treatment, digging and repair of boreholes, sanitation facilities, hygiene items and non-food item (NFI) kits to meet refugees, returnees and host communities' needs.
- Nutrition services for children under five suffering from severe acute malnutrition in health centres and mobile clinics, and the provision of nutrition supplies
- Provision of health screening referrals, vaccination, essential drugs and medical kits to ensure access to health care and services benefiting both host and refugee populations.
- Child Protection and Gender-Based Violence (GBV) prevention and response, including psychosocial support, child-friendly spaces, case management and referral to specialised services, family tracing and reunification, and supporting the case management of unaccompanied and separated children and prevention of childhood statelessness.
- Education services to ensure refugee, returnee and host community children and adolescents can access inclusive, quality education and learning opportunities in safe and protective environments.
UNICEF is calling on the international community to urgently support its efforts by providing additional funding and resources to address the growing crisis. With sustained support, UNICEF aims to reach and assist more children in need and secure their rights to survival, development, and protection.
#####
Notes to editors:
ABOUT UNICEF
UNICEF works in some of the world’s toughest places, to reach the world’s most disadvantaged children. Across 190 countries and territories, we work for every child, everywhere, to build a better world for everyone. For more information about UNICEF and its work for children, visit www.unicef.org
Follow UNICEF on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube
For more information please contact:
Joe English UNICEF New York, +1 917 893 0692 jenglish@unicef.org
Nøkkelord
Om UNICEF Norge
Følg pressemeldinger fra UNICEF Norge
Registrer deg med din e-postadresse under for å få de nyeste sakene fra UNICEF Norge på e-post fortløpende. Du kan melde deg av når som helst.
Siste pressemeldinger fra UNICEF Norge
UNICEF-appell 2026: Over 200 milioner barn trenger humanitær hjelp10.12.2025 01:01:00 CET | Pressemelding
UNICEF advarer om at barns behov når et kritisk nivå i 2026 og ber om umiddelbar støtte. Totalt anslås over 200 millioner barn å trenge humanitær hjelp neste år.
Bistandskutt truer millioner av barns liv og skolegang20.11.2025 09:53:36 CET | Pressemelding
Kutt i bistand kan føre til at 4,5 millioner barn under fem år dør innen 2030. Seks millioner barn risikerer å miste skolegangen allerede neste år. Dette kommer frem i en ny UNICEF-rapport.
Ny undersøkelse: Unge har størst tro på at bistand nytter5.11.2025 06:00:00 CET | Pressemelding
En fersk undersøkelse gjennomført av Ipsos for UNICEF viser at troen på internasjonal bistand står sterkt i Norge – særlig blant unge, høyt utdannede og de med høy inntekt. Hele 7 av 10 unge mellom 18 og 29 år mener bistand gir barn og unge en bedre fremtid.
UNICEF Norge: Norske kommuner oppfyller ikke barns lovpålagte tjenester28.10.2025 06:00:00 CET | Pressemelding
Norske kommuner oppfyller i gjennomsnitt bare 59 prosent av de lovpålagte tjenestene for barn, viser UNICEF Norges kommuneanalyse 2025. Den avdekker også store forskjeller mellom kommunene.
Et stille kutt i barnefamilienes økonomi15.10.2025 10:39:35 CEST | Pressemelding
Levekostnadene øker for barnefamiliene, og nesten 100.000 barn vokser nå opp i en lavinntektsfamilie. Flere familier kutter i mat, tannhelse og oppvarming, mens inkassosaker og sosialhjelpssøknader skyter i været. Det rammer barna hardest.
I vårt presserom finner du alle våre siste pressemeldinger, kontaktpersoner, bilder, dokumenter og annen relevant informasjon om oss.
Besøk vårt presserom