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People of contested Abyei region remain displaced in South Sudan

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Angui Machar pours sorghum into a hopper at a Caritas-sponsored grinding mill run by widows in the displaced persons camp in Agok, South Sudan. Tens of thousands of residents of Abyei, a contested region along the border between Sudan and South Sudan, remain displaced in Agok. Under a 2005 peace agreement, Abyei was supposed to have a referendum to decide which country it would join, but the two countries have yet to agree on who can vote. In 2011, militias aligned with Khartoum drove out most of Abyei's Dinka Ngok residents, pushing them across a river into Agok. More than 40,000 Dinka Ngok have since returned to Abyei with support from Caritas South Sudan, which has drilled wells, built houses, opened clinics and provided seeds and tools for the returnees. Yet continuing insecurity means a greater number remain in Agok, where they remain dependant on Caritas and other organizations for food and other support.

Filename
south-sudan-2015-jeffrey-abyei-249.jpg
Copyright
Paul Jeffrey
Image Size
3875x2775 / 4.3MB
Sudan South Sudan Africa Abyei Agok Cordaid CRS Catholic Relief Services Caritas Internationalis Caritas South Sudan Caritas Catholic Church war conflict violence displaced displacement IDPs grinding mill food relief aid emergency sorghum grain bag pour man
Contained in galleries
Abyei
Angui Machar pours sorghum into a hopper at a Caritas-sponsored grinding mill run by widows in the displaced persons camp in Agok, South Sudan. Tens of thousands of residents of Abyei, a contested region along the border between Sudan and South Sudan, remain displaced in Agok. Under a 2005 peace agreement, Abyei was supposed to have a referendum to decide which country it would join, but the two countries have yet to agree on who can vote. In 2011, militias aligned with Khartoum drove out most of Abyei's Dinka Ngok residents, pushing them across a river into Agok. More than 40,000 Dinka Ngok have since returned to Abyei with support from Caritas South Sudan, which has drilled wells, built houses, opened clinics and provided seeds and tools for the returnees. Yet continuing insecurity means a greater number remain in Agok, where they remain dependant on Caritas and other organizations for food and other support.