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WHO WE AREThe International Organization for Migration (IOM) is part of the United Nations System as the leading inter-governmental organization promoting since 1951 humane and orderly migration for the benefit of all, with 175 member states and a presence in over 100 countries. IOM has had a presence in Sudan since 1993.
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Our WorkAs the leading inter-governmental organization promoting humane and orderly migration, IOM plays a key role to support the achievement of the 2030 Agenda through different areas of intervention that connect both humanitarian assistance and sustainable development. Across Sudan, IOM provides a comprehensive response to the humanitarian needs of migrants, internally displaced persons, returnees and host communities.
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IOM Aids Southern Sudanese to Move from the North, But Says Time, Money is Running Out
A fourth IOM convoy of barges carrying nearly 1,800 South Sudanese from Kosti, a town south of the Sudanese capital Khartoum, has arrived in the South Sudan capital Juba. The operation, funded by the Common Humanitarian Fund (CHF), brings the number of people making the 1,436 kilometres river journey with IOM to nearly 7,000 since 26th July, following South Sudan's 9th July Declaration of Independence. The convoy, consisting of six luggage barges and two double-decker passenger barges, left Kosti on 18th September and follows an earlier CHF-funded IOM movement of about 7,000 people, which was completed in early April. But 11,000 Southerners remain at Kosti and many thousands more are waiting in Khartoum for help, according to IOM’s Claire Bolt. "Many of these people have been waiting for months and have run out of money. Time is also running out. We have some funding from the UN to pay for more movements, but this is only a fraction of what is needed to move all the Southerners who want to leave Sudan before the expiry of the 9-month interim period," she says. Movements have been further complicated by outbreaks of violence in border areas between Sudan and the new South Sudan, closing roads normally used to access the South and cutting off commercial and other links. Journeys to final destinations within the South have also been hampered by rain and large numbers of Southern Sudanese arriving by bus have been stranded in three IOM-supported transit camps in Renk, pending their onward transportation. However, a new agreement signed on 5th October between IOM and the National IDP Centre of the Sudanese Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs will help another 12,000 South Sudanese to travel by train from the North to Aweil and Wau in South Sudan in the coming months. The agreement, funded by the UN Central Emergency Fund (CERF), will target people camped out and waiting for transport at departure points around Khartoum, some of them since last November. The trains will provide access to Greater Bahr el Ghazal in the western part of South Sudan, which is otherwise inaccessible from both the North and the South during the wet season. This CERF funding will allow IOM to help an additional 6,000 people to travel by barge from Kosti with the help of the Logistics Sudanese Company. Boarding of the barges has already started. IOM is also making special arrangements to fly vulnerable people who are unable to cope with the barge or train journey to South Sudan from Khartoum. For more information please contact: Claire Bolt Co-chair of the UN Returns Sector and manager of the CHF-funded IOM returns project IOM Khartoum Tel: +249 922 406 659 E-mail: "mailto:cbolt@iom.int">cbolt@iom.int