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Sudanese refugees in Jordan living rough

More than 3,000 Sudanese refugees in Jordan complain of the dire conditions they are living in.

The Jordanian newspaper El Ghad reported on Monday that during the last two weeks, the more than 3,000 Sudanese refugees in Jordanian refugee camps are suffering from the cold and rain that floods their tents, as well as an outbreak of diseases, in particular among children.

The Sudanese refugees regularly protest in front of the UNHCR’s offices to demand more aid. One of them told France24 in October that “Very few Sudanese refugees are aided by the UNHCR.

“Personally, I only know of five who get financial assistance on a monthly basis. UNHCR’s social workers sometimes tell us that countries send money earmarked for Syrians because they don’t know that there are Sudanese refugees in Jordan. So we feel like we’re being given far less help than the Syrian and Iraqi refugees,” he said.

“Overall, we get little aid. On top of that, refugees don’t legally have the right to work in Jordan. So in order to earn just a little bit of money, I wash cars in the street. Some Sudanese refugees do cleaning, or work in markets. But we rarely manage to work more than two or three days per month. In the street we often hear racist comments, like ‘do you eat bananas?’ For Syrians, it’s surely easier to work.”

3,480 Sudanese are registered as refugees with the UNHCR in Jordan, out of a total of about 687,000 refugees. 629,000 of them are Syrian, 51,000 Iraqi, and 772 are Somali.