INTERNATIONAL
Food supplies to some Sudan refugees could dry up within 2 months, WFP says

Sudanese women from community kitchens run by local volunteers distribute meals for people who are affected by conflict and extreme hunger and are out of reach of international aid efforts, in Omdurman, Sudan. - REUTERS/Filepic
GENEVA: Food aid to help Sudanese refugees in four neighbouring countries could end within the next couple of months without an urgent injection of new funding, a World Food Programme official said on Tuesday, warning of rising malnutrition levels.
AI Brief
- Over 4 million refugees have fled Sudan's war to neighboring countries with underfunded, inadequate shelter and food aid.
- WFP warns that without US$200 million in new funding, aid in CAR, Egypt, Ethiopia, and Libya could halt within two months.
- Cuts will raise child malnutrition risks; US remains top donor despite major foreign aid reductions under Trump.
"Unless new funding is secured, all refugees will face assistance cuts in the coming months," Shaun Hughes, the WFP's emergency coordinator for the Sudan regional crisis, told a Geneva press briefing, calling for $200 million over six months.
"In the case of four countries - that's the Central African Republic, Egypt, Ethiopia and Libya - WFP's operations are now so severely underfunded, that all support could cease in the coming months as resources run dry," he said, clarifying later that this could happen within two months.
Many of those fleeing are escaping from hunger hot spots in Sudan. A joint U.N. report said last month the country was at immediate risk of famine.
Hughes said that any reduction or end to rations would leave child refugees at a greater risk of malnutrition.
Asked why the funding had fallen, he cited reductions from donors across the board and rising humanitarian needs.
He added that the United States, which has reduced its foreign aid spending dramatically under President Donald Trump, remained its top donor for Sudan.
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