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Our impact in South Sudan

Discover our 2022 Annual Report

In 2022, South Sudan’s fragility continued to exacerbate as the country reeled from the increasing threats and impact of climate change and conflict, resulting to increased  hunger, displacements, and outbreaks of diseases. All these affect children and communities in many parts of the country.

World Vision South Sudan has remained steadfast on its commitment to deliver its promise — improve the lives of  3 million children by 2025 — as it pursued programs and projects focusing on emergency relief, recovery, and resilience.

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Peace not revenge: A new day dawns in South Sudan’s warring communities

Give peace a chance this 2022 Bhan appeals, "An elder said that to forgive someone is to forgive yourself. That touched me deeply."

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WFP and World Vision help break stigma on menstrual period hindering girls’ education in South Sudan

Let's pursue better support for girls' hygiene and well-being this 2022. "There is need for strong political will to develop better menstrual hygiene management that address the girls’ issues in schools and public spaces.”

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Women volunteers fight COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in South Sudan

Stop vaccine myths and misconceptions: "A lot of myths and misconceptions exist about the virus and the vaccine. They allege that the vaccine can cause infertility particularly in women, or can turn people into zombies."

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Community grazing initiative gives South Sudan’s children opportunity to play and learn

Changing mindsets: Over 600 farmers and cattle keepers were organized into groups as they learned about improved forage production and conservation of resources. “In our community, children do not go to school because they are made to watch over animals "

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World Vision’s emergency responders are South Sudan’s famine busters

World Vision’s Rapid Response Mechanism (RRM) Project in partnership with the World Food Programme (WFP) supports 193,131 internally-displaced people during the lean season living in the most remote corners of South Sudan’s three counties in 19 different locations. The various delivery modes such as air drops, river deliveries as well as inland by trucks mean that the team has to adopt to various, and very volatile, operating environments.

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South Sudan

World Vision has been working in South Sudan since 1989, through our humanitarian work. Our operations cover four major zones: Juba, Upper Nile, Warrap, and Western Equatoria.

In 2022, World Vision's humanitarian assistance in the country has reached out over 2.3 million people in need, including 1.3 million children, through various initiatives such as food security and livelihood, health and nutrition, protection, education, water, sanitation and hygiene among others.

We were one of the few organizations that provided assistance during the war to the displaced populations in what was then the Southern Sudan region of Sudan, until after the birth of the Republic of South Sudan on 9 July 2011.

The widespread violence during the country’s 5th anniversary of independence made the humanitarian emergency even worse. Food insecurity continues to plague over 7 million people and a recent UN report stated that an estimated 360,000 children under five suffer severe malnutrition.

Over the past years, South Sudan has been battling one of its worst food insecurities. The East Africa Hunger Emergency Response in South Sudan has a target of 1,706,704 people, approximately 90,000 of these are internally displaced persons (IDPs). It spans over an operational area covering four of the 10 states in South Sudan, most critical are the areas that are now facing serious flooding mostly in Upper Nile, Warrap, and Northern Bahr el Ghazal states.

The Hunger Crisis: South Sudan battles one of its worst food insecurities

Our Work

Join World Vision’s journey working in a fragile context such as South Sudan

Livelihoods

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Health

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Peacebuilding

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It Takes A Nation

To Protect a Future Generation

More than 19,000 South Sudanese children are associated with armed groups and the long-running conflict. This has to stop. Watch Nancy's story.

A Sudanese boy drinking clean water

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