Getting back in business in South Sudan

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Elizabeth lives in Bor, the capital of South Sudan's Jonglei State. With Oxfam's support, she is cultivating new crops, including tomatoes, peppers, chillies, kale, onions, watermelons, and eggplant. She is using the extra income to pay for her children's school and the family's health care. Photo: Tim Bierley/Oxfam

Oxfam is working with communities in South Sudan to create sustainable sources of income after famine and conflict drained people's livelihoods. 

Ongoing conflict and food shortages have cut off your resources for earning a living and feeding your children. You need to take care of yourself and your family. How do you get back on your feet when so much has been taken from you? 

That’s a familiar dilemma in South Sudan, where millions have been displaced since war broke out in 2013. Famine was declared there in February, and while humanitarian agencies have prevented the famine from spreading, 4.8 million people—40 percent of the population—still face severe hunger. 

Oxfam is working with communities to find innovative ways to help people meet their basic needs and improve their quality of life in a sustainable way. In Akobo, where fighting erupted in nearby towns in March and April, we are providing fishing kits and supporting vegetable gardens; bread-making groups; a hair salon run by widows; a youth-run hair salon; literacy, numeracy, and English classes for women; and youth carpentry training.

In Bor, we contracted local traders to stock up on fishing kits, livestock, vegetable seeds, and farming equipment, and provided vouchers to community members so they could buy the goods. In total, 15,000 people have been received support to build livelihoods. 

Here are some of their stories, in their own words.

Photo: Tim Bierley/Oxfam

“In January the bakery was running smoothly,” says Mary, the leader of Akobo’s widows association, which Oxfam helped to set up a bakery that supplies bread to the town. “When the crisis [conflict in neighboring towns] came in April, we really feared that fighting would come to Akobo too. No one wanted to go out of the town to find charcoal and firewood. We closed business for two months.”

Photo: Tim Bierley/Oxfam

“We had made some money between January and April,” says Mary. “We gave it to members of our group who wanted to get to Ethiopia. We started making bread again in June, and I think business will grow very soon.” She hopes that they will soon be running the business on their own, and turning a profit. 

Photo: Tim Bierley/Oxfam

Nyabol is farmer at one of Oxfam's community gardens. In April, nearby conflict drove her to seek refuge in Ethiopia. “The fighting happened and we just ran,” she says. “I took some vegetables to Ethiopia and sold some there to sustain me a bit. Now there is nothing left. We are planting again now though. Let’s hope we have a strong harvest."

Photo: Tim Bierley/Oxfam

"I heard that Oxfam was looking for people to train for haircutting,” says John, who is a barber at a salon supported by Oxfam. “I signed up and trained for two weeks. Now I’m earning a living through the skills that I learned.”

“My brothers depend on me and my parents are old so I have to support them at home. The little I make here is helping to make their lives a bit more comfortable."

Photo: Tim Bierley/Oxfam

"I joined the salon a couple of months ago,” says Elizabeth, 22, who works at a widow-run hair salon. “My husband was killed, and I had no way to get income to support my family. I'm here to support them and get something to look after myself. I used to cut and braid hair for my friends here, so it made sense to use the skills I already have. "


Right now, millions of people are on the brink of starvation. Meet a few of the individuals working hard to overcome hunger, and find out how you can help.

See more

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