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Thousands of Stranded South Sudanese to be Assisted by IOM to Reach Home

Some of the many thousands of South Sudanese camping near the border between North and South Sudan for several months will finally be able to continue their journey home from Sunday 14th August 2011. IOM is organizing transportation for up to 4,000 returnees out of more than 6,000 who have been stuck in transit, waiting for help to take them home to the South.  An ageing road network and seasonal flooding mean that many parts of Upper Nile region, where the majority of returnees are heading to, become inaccessible except by boats or barges. A first group of around 2,000 returnees will leave Renk way station in Upper Nile State at the weekend in a convoy of four barges carrying both people and luggage. The barges will travel upstream the River Nile to Malakal to the South. The journey is expected to take one week. The barges will be stopping at Kaka and Melut to allow returnees, whose final destinations are near to those towns, to disembark. All returnees being assisted by IOM have been immunized against communicable diseases such as typhoid and measles. They have also been given information about personal hygiene in order to prevent the spread of infections such as diarrhea and cholera. Three IOM teams will provide a medical escort for the convoy. Prior to their departure, IOM carried out the registration, verification and medical screening of the returnees to assess whether they were fit to travel. IOM and its partners have also distributed basic non-food items including mosquito nets, blankets and plastic sheeting. For those still stranded in Renk, IOM is providing emergency medical assistance and is operating a mobile clinic at the Mina camp. It averages 70 consultations per day. About 2.5 million South Sudanese have returned to the South since 2005, nearly 330,000 of them since October 2010. IOM has tracked over 14,000 returnees arriving in Renk since 28 June 2011 and up until now, has assisted several hundreds to reach their final destinations in the South. The vast majority of South Sudanese returns are organized by the government in Khartoum with funding from the government of the South. For more information, please contact: Gerard Waite IOM Juba Tel: +249922406615 E-mail: "mailto:gwaite@iom.int">gwaite@iom.int