South Sudan: Soaring food prices force people to live in refugee camps

South Sudan: Soaring food prices force people to live in refugee camps

Traders attribute skyrocketing, fluctuating prices to devaluation of local currency against US dollar

By Benjamin Takpiny

JUBA, South Sudan (AA) – People in South Sudan are reeling under the volatile and soaring food prices to the extent that many of them are preferring to live in UN refugee camps.

People say they are forced to spend 95% of their incomes on buying edibles.

Monica Adhieu,47, a mother of five children who had gone to buy food items in a market in the capital Juba, realized that she could only buy a sack of maize flour with the amount she had earned.

"As you can see I am buying a 50-kilogram sack of maize flour which is now costing 12,000 South Sudanese pounds (SSP) ($50), and that is the only amount left from my salary. It is not possible now for me to purchase any other item,” she told Anadolu Agency.

Adhieu is working at a local restaurant in Konyo Konyo Market in Juba.

“I pay 10,000 SSP ($76) as rent for a single room, where I live. I earn 5,600 SSP ($42) in a week and about 22,400 SSP ($130) in a month, “she said.

After spending her earnings to buy food, there is hardly anything left to pay the school and tuition fee of her five children.

She is skeptical, whether her children will be able to return to schools, once they are open after the COVID-19 lockdown. With this hand-to-mouth existence, it is impossible to even think of shopping.

“Just buying maize flour, cooking oil and beans that last for a month, I require 30,000 SSP ($190) against my earnings of 22,400 SSP ($130),” she said.

For food items, South Sudan relies significantly on imported items from neighboring Kenya, Sudan, and Uganda.

The devaluation of local currency is also deterring traders from importing food items, paralyzing the supply chain network.

- No money to pay rent

The food inflation has forced a private primary school teacher John Bol,38, to move to a refugee camp in Uganda along with his six children, where he gets free food from the UN.

“My monthly salary was 25,000 SSP ($150). But since lockdown enforced in April, I have not received any money. When food prices went higher, I took my family to a refugee camp in Biale settlement,” he said.

A house owner chased away Mary Thon, 34-year old mother of four children after she failed to pay rent, as all her earnings were spent on buying food.

“My monthly salary cannot even buy even a single item, like a bag of maize flour or tin of cooking oil. My children often sleep with empty stomachs or only get only a single meal a day," she added.

The urban poor – with their overdependence on markets coupled with insecure, inconstant, and low-paying jobs – are the hardest hit by the economic crisis. The livelihoods of almost more than half of 610,000 people living in Juba and Wau, has been severely undermined.

Traders operating within the busy Konyo Konyo market in Juba are attributing skyrocketing commodity prices to the depreciation of the South Sudanese pound against the US dollar.

Maker Abu Majok, a wholesale trader dealing in both food items and non-food items said that the high exchange rate of the dollar vis-à-vis the South Sudanese currency has resulted in a surge in prices.

- Fluctuating prices

“It is not surprising that the price for a particular commodity in the morning is different from the price charged for the same commodity in the evening,” said Majok.

“I sell food items like Egyptian beans, Tania, and non-food items such as soap, sleeping mats. We import our goods from Egypt and transporting them to Juba has become costly,” he added.

Daniel Kech Puoch, the second deputy governor of Bank of South Sudan (BOSS) said the depreciation was necessary as the foreign currency reserves were depleting fast.

Majok said that transporting a 40 feet container from Egypt to Mombasa costs about 4,000 dollars and then from Mombasa to Juba it accumulates to 5,500 dollars.

He disclosed that customs officials charge 2,500 dollars for every container as tax

Kaynak:Source of News

This news has been read 149 times in total

ADD A COMMENT to TO THE NEWS
UYARI: Küfür, hakaret, rencide edici cümleler veya imalar, inançlara saldırı içeren, imla kuralları ile yazılmamış,
Türkçe karakter kullanılmayan ve büyük harflerle yazılmış yorumlar onaylanmamaktadır.
Previous and Next News