
Funding for refugees in Uganda will run out next month, UN warns
A funding crisis is threatening programmes for people fleeing there from strife-torn countries in the region including Sudan, and Uganda's neighbours South Sudan and Democratic Republic of Congo, the UN refugee agency UNHCR said.
"Emergency funding runs out in September," Dominique Hyde, the agency's Director for External Relations, said in a statement.
"More children will die of malnutrition, more girls will fall victim to sexual violence, and families will be left without shelter or protection unless the world steps up."
UNHCR and other UN agencies face one of the worst funding crises in decades, compounded by U.S. and other donor states' decisions to slash foreign aid funding.
Uganda is home to 1.93 million refugees, more than a million of them under 18, according to UNHCR figures.
An average 600 people are still coming in every day and the overall figure, already the largest in Africa, is due to rise to 2 million by the end of the year, the agency says.
It said it would only be able to meet a third of the costs associated with supporting Sudanese refugees in Uganda - and would have to cut its monthly funding to $5 per refugee from $16 unless more money is found.
Malnutrition rates are rising as food, water, and medicine supplies shrink, while the risk of suicide is increasing among young refugees due to a reduction in mental health staff, the agency added.

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Reuters
6 hours ago
- Reuters
Funding cuts drive Sudan's children to the brink of irreversible harm, UNICEF says
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Reuters
9 hours ago
- Reuters
Israel says it will allow controlled entry of goods into Gaza via merchants
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The Guardian
16 hours ago
- The Guardian
As I sit here in Australia watching Israel starve Palestinians to death, I can't help but think it could have been me
'Why can't I have a pomegranate?' The little girl's question sank his heart. How would my colleague, Hatem, explain to his daughter that there are no pomegranates, and barely any flour? How will he explain that real people are doing this to her on purpose? Starving her little stomach as a weapon? As I sit here in Australia, watching 'our ally in the Middle East' deprive my family and friends of food, I can't help but think: it could have been me. The only difference between me and Hatem's daughter is a few thousand kilometres. Geographic luck is why I am safe, why I have clean water, a fridge full of food, a home without drones buzzing overhead. But it doesn't save me from the guilt. I sit glued to the screen as my colleagues, with sunken cheeks and frail bodies – barely able to stand – try to document their own starvation for Americans, Australians, anyone, to take action. It doesn't stop me from wondering why – as the UN secretary general calls this the highest number of people facing catastrophic hunger recorded by its system 'anywhere, anytime' – my colleagues still need to 'prove' their own starvation. It doesn't stop me from feeling that perhaps, as humans, we are all unlucky. Because we are living in hell. We live in a global system that lets you bomb hospitals and starve children. We live in a world that allows this to happen. I stare at the empty Word document. I have tried to write this article for a week now but can't seem to find the right words. What words could ever be enough? What sentence could capture the feeling of watching an entire people slowly vanish? What words can I offer if footage of a child with a distended stomach isn't enough? If a mother crying over rice grain isn't enough? If people fighting for food scraps dropped from the sky, hospital wards filled with toddlers but empty of medicine, and lines for nonexistent water, are not enough? What I feel is something more than heartbreak. It's rage. No child should go to bed hungry, let alone die from it. No mother should have to choose which child gets to eat. No people should be punished simply for existing. No one should know what it's like not to eat for days. Yet, here we are. Israel is deliberately starving Gaza to death. The starvation is not a byproduct of genocide – it is the genocide; deliberate, calculated and human-made. It is starving more than 2 million people slowly, painfully and publicly. Before that, it flattened our homes, burned people alive in their tents, displaced millions, and targeted schools and universities. It turned Gaza, a place once filled with life and joy, into rubble. It turned schools into a place children would sleep, learning only how to survive – or how to die. And now, finally, it is openly starving us to death. Parents watch their children go hungry, feeling helpless. Infants are born without the chance to grow. Supermarket shelves are empty. Aid trucks are blocked. People are dying, not only from bullets but from hunger. These are not statistics. These are my cousins, my neighbours, my friends. People I grew up with. People I used to share a sandwich with at school recess. It is hard for me to believe they are now skin and bone, counting their days without food. Some tell me they have stopped counting. You and I are watching a human-made starvation, with full internet access, with journalists risking their lives to show us. There is nothing hidden. Nothing secret. We know. And knowing comes with responsibility. To speak up. To protest. To donate. To demand our governments take real action. To refuse to be complicit. These acts may feel little, compared with this scale of human cruelty. But if I were watching my hungry daughter ask about pomegranates, I would want every human on this planet to try doing something. Anything. Because anything is infinitely more than nothing. Plestia Alaqad is an award-winning journalist and author