Data Story: Over 260 abductees reunited with their families between 2021 and 2023 in Jonglei and GPAA
Inter-communal clashes in South Sudan have been involving children and women abductions, an act the UN strongly condemns as ‘horrific’. Fortunately, efforts to locate and reunite the abductees with their families have been effective in the last three years between Jonglei State and Greater Pibor.
Writer: Ghai Aketch
Armed inter-communal violence in some parts of South Sudan has left families separated due to abductions. The act has been targeting vulnerable children and women. This is perceived as a violation of human rights according to several condemnation issued by the UN.
The advocacy groups and local governments have been playing their role in locating and recovering abductees, and fortunately many have reunited with their families.
This data story envelopes the available records of the recovered abductees who are mainly children and women, from 2021 to 2023.
In this period, a total of 266 abductees have been reunited with their loved ones in 2021 to 2023. Thanks to the cooperation between humanitarian agencies, local governments of Jonglei State and Greater Pibor Administrative Area, GPAA.
But more than 2,000 children and women were abducted in a period of six months from around July 2022 to January 2023 according to authorities in Jonglei State and GPAA.
However, out of this figure, GPAA claims that nearly 2,000 members are missing in its community, a claim Jonglei State refutes as an inflated figure.
The chart above shows number of abductees recovered in each year
Also in 2023, from the chart above, 123 abductees of Pibor origin were recovered in Jonglei State by efforts of government and humanitarian agencies. This figure is the highest in the three-year period.
It is also followed by 118 who were recovered in 2021. However, 2022 had the least number of recovered abductees, having only 25 reunited with their families.
From 2021 to 2022, Jonglei State returned to Pibor 95.86 percent of the total number in the period. That is equal to 255 recovered abductees. Additionally, in the same duration, Pibor returned to Jonglei 4.14 percent, an equivalent of eleven (11) abductees.
Conclusion
The United Nations agencies and the local governments in Jonglei and Greater Pibor Administrative Area have collaboratively worked in advocating for the recovery of abductees.
This cooperation saw recovery of these 266 vulnerable children and women which is lauded by human rights activists as a positive advancement towards upholding human dignity.
The reports from the two communities point out that they have more missing members. This has been upping the call for further engagement with the chiefs to locate the allegedly abducted children and women.