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EU pledges 85 mn euros to Uganda for S Sudan refugees

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres is visiting a refugee settlement today, before joining other top officials, donors and regional leaders for the Refugee Solidarity Summit in Kampala on Friday.

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The EU pledged 85 million euros (USD 95 million) to Uganda today, ahead of a summit to raise twenty times that amount to help it deal with nearly one million refugees from South Sudan.

Uganda is facing the world's fastest growing refugee crisis as South Sudanese pour over the border to escape more than three years of civil war in their country.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres is visiting a refugee settlement today, before joining other top officials, donors and regional leaders for the Refugee Solidarity Summit in Kampala on Friday.

The summit aims to raise USD 2 billion for the coming year, however organisers say USD 8 billion is needed to deal with the crisis for the coming four years.

The European pledge is to "help Uganda deal with this unprecedented situation and support the most vulnerable refugees," said aid commissioner Christos Stylianides, who visited the Imvepi settlement in the remote north of the country with UN refugee chief Filippo Grandi.

"Uganda's example of helping vulnerable people cope with displacement is an example for the whole region and the world.

However no country can deal with such a high number of refugees on its own," said Stylianides.

According to the UN refugee agency more than 947,000 South Sudanese refugees are sheltering in Uganda, bringing the total number of refugees in the east African nation to more than 1.2 million.

South Sudan, the world's youngest nation, was plunged into civil war in 2013 after President Salva Kiir accused his rival and former deputy Riek Machar of plotting a coup against him.

An August 2015 peace deal was left in tatters when fighting broke out in Juba in July last year, spreading violence across the country.

It was this outbreak of fighting that led to the biggest exodus, with some 743,000 South Sudanese arriving in Uganda since July 2016, about 2,000 a day.

More than 270,000 are housed in Bidibidi settlement, which overtook Kenya's Dadaab earlier this year as the biggest refugee camp in the world.

 

(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)

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