UN Geneva Press Briefing - 09 January 2026
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Press Conferences | OCHA , UNICEF , OHCHR

UN Geneva Press Briefing - 09 January 2026

  • SUDAN

- OCHA, Jens Laerke - Humanitarian consequences of 1000 days of war in Sudan (OCHA)
- UNICEF, Ricardo Pires - Sudan and the situation of children as we approach 1,000 days of brutal conflict.

  • UGANDA
- OHCHR, Marta Hurtado - Uganda: Concerns about upcoming elections

UN GENEVA PRESS BRIEFING

9 January 2026

 

Consequences of 1,000 Days of War in Sudan

Jens Laerke for the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said today marked 1,000 days since the start of the war in Sudan — 1,000 days of civilians paying the price for a war they did not choose. Nearly 34 million people needed humanitarian support and the scale of suffering was staggering. The entire region was suffering from the spillover of the crisis.

Sudan was the largest displacement crisis in the world — 9.3 million people were uprooted inside the country and more than 4.3 million had fled across borders, placing immense strain on neighbouring countries. At the same time, large-scale population movements had been recorded in Khartoum, where people were returning to a capital ravaged by the war and littered with explosive hazards.

Fighting continued across multiple fronts. In Kordofan, sieges had cut off the towns of Kadugli and Dilling, restricting food, health care and access to farms and markets. In Darfur, fighting on the ground and drone attacks from the sky continued, and there had been long-range strikes on civilian infrastructure far beyond the front lines.

Famine had been confirmed in El Fasher and Kadugli with at least 20 other areas at risk. More than 21 million people were currently estimated to be acutely food insecure across the country. Horrifying reports continue to emerge of alleged violations of international law committed during the Rapid Support Force’s takeover of El Fasher in late October, including mass killings.

Women were bearing the heaviest burden. Sexual violence and abuse were rampant and nearly 12 million people — mostly women and girls — were at risk of gender-based violence. Female-headed households were now three times more likely to be food insecure - three-quarters of these households reported not having enough to eat. Hunger was becoming increasingly gendered.

The health system in Sudan was also collapsing. Less than half of health facilities were fully functional, with significantly lower coverage in areas of active conflict. Cholera had been reported in all 18 states, with over 72,000 suspected cases last year alone. In West Kordofan and Aj Jazirah states, women reported giving birth in overcrowded shelters, schools and on the move, without clean water, light or medical support.

Humanitarians were delivering where they could. Nearly 19 million people were reached in 2025, with local and women-led organizations leading from the front. These groups were often the first — and sometimes only — responders in hard-to-reach and high-risk areas and they were facing growing threats to their safety. More than 125 humanitarian workers had been killed since April 2023 and access remained dangerous, inconsistent and politically constrained. Funding for the response — as elsewhere — was falling short: only 36 per cent of OCHA’s 4.2 billion United States dollar (USD) appeal last year was funded.

Cuts in financial support had forced an even tighter prioritisation of the 2026 Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan. Partners aimed to assist some 20 million people of the nearly 34 million estimated to require humanitarian support in Sudan. Some 2.9 billion USD was required to implement this plan, which was around 70 per cent of last year’s ask. This reduction reflected the realities of the current funding environment, not of the level of needs on the ground.

One thousand days was nearly half the last World War. Today, OCHA’s call was urgent: first, an immediate cessation of hostilities and real steps towards a lasting peace; second, adherence to international humanitarian law, with access facilitated across conflict lines and protection of civilians, including aid workers, and civilian infrastructure; and third, a renewed push on funding, with particular emphasis on supporting local networks, women-led organization and national partners who remained front and centre of this response.

Ricardo Pires for the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said today marked a grim milestone: 1,000 days since war erupted in Sudan. One thousand days of agony for millions of children across the country. For the children of Sudan, the world was 1,000 days late.

Since April 2023, Sudan had become perhaps the largest and most devastating humanitarian crisis in the world. More than 33 million people — two-thirds of the population — now needed urgent humanitarian assistance. Half of them were children.

More than five million children had been forced from their homes. That was the equivalent of 5,000 children displaced every single day since this conflict began. Many had been displaced not once, but repeatedly — with violence following them wherever they fled.

Children continued to be killed and injured. Just this week, eight children were reportedly killed in an attack in Al Obeid, North Kordofan.

Famine had been confirmed in Al Fasher and Kadugli, with 20 additional areas at risk across Greater Darfur and Greater Kordofan. An estimated 21 million people faced acute food insecurity this year.

In North Darfur — the epicentre of Sudan's malnutrition emergency — nearly 85,000 children with severe acute malnutrition were treated between January and November last year — one child every six minutes.

Measles and other preventable diseases were resurging as immunity gaps widened. Outbreaks had already been reported in several localities, with a growing risk of large-scale transmission in overcrowded camps. In remote communities, measles vaccine coverage had dropped by 46 per cent and routine immunisation, measured by the first dose of the vaccine for diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis, fell to just 48 per cent in 2024, threatening decades of progress in child health. The situation was particularly alarming

Sexual violence was also being used as a weapon of war, and millions of children were at risk of rape. Survivors included children as young as one year old.

Behind every one of these numbers was a child — frightened, hungry, and wondering why the world had not come to help.

Despite extraordinary insecurity and access constraints, UNICEF and partners continued to deliver life-saving assistance wherever it could. It was treating severe malnutrition, vaccinating children against deadly diseases, and providing safe water and protection services to those affected by violence and displacement. These efforts were keeping children alive, but they were not enough. Humanitarian action could save lives, but it could not replace the protection that only peace could provide.

UNICEF was urgently calling for an immediate end to the fighting. All parties needed to uphold their obligations under international humanitarian law: protect civilians, stop attacks on hospitals, schools and water systems, and allow safe, sustained and unimpeded humanitarian access across Sudan.

Children in Sudan were not statistics. They were frightened, displaced and hungry — but they were also determined, resourceful and resilient. Every day, they strove to learn, to play, to hope, even as they waited for the world to act.

Ending this conflict was not a political ask; it was a moral necessity. One thousand days was far too long. Children could not wait.

In response to questions, Mr. Laerke said Sudan was one of the countries that would benefit from the two-billion-dollar allocation announced recently by the United States. Sudan could be the first country to make a memorandum of understanding with the United States that would guide allocation of this funding. Such an agreement could be a template for other countries to follow.

Kadugli remained under siege to this day.

There was no data on the number of female-headed households in Sudan. However, OCHA had surveyed groups within the country and had found that female-headed households were three times more likely to be food insecure than male-headed households. Existing gender-based inequality in Sudan had been exacerbated during the war. This was why it was important that female and women-led organisations received support, as they had specialised knowledge and were best placed to support these households.

OCHA and the United Nations had been talking about the crisis in Sudan from day one, repeating the same statements, but had not seen action needed to address the situation from the international community. While the crisis continued, OCHA would continue to treat it as a high priority.


Concerns about Upcoming Elections in Uganda

Marta Hurtado for the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) presented a new OHCHR report showing that next week’s elections in Uganda would take place in an environment marked by widespread repression and intimidation against the political opposition, human rights defenders, journalists and those with dissenting views.

The report highlighted how the authorities had, since the last election in 2021, enacted or amended a series of laws entrenching repression and impunity, particularly against the opposition, and restricting the rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly ahead of the 15 January polls.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk called on the Ugandan authorities to uphold the rights of all Ugandans to take part in the public affairs of their country.

“The Ugandan authorities must ensure all Ugandans can participate fully and safely in the election, as is their right under international law,” said Türk. “They must, among others, ensure that no unnecessary or disproportionate force, including lethal force, is used to disperse peaceful protests.”

Ugandan authorities had arrested and detained opposition leaders and activists, raided the premises of political opposition parties and confiscated their property, as well as suspended radio stations, arrested bloggers, and tightened control over non-governmental organizations.

The leading opposition figure Kizza Besigye remained in detention on questionable treason charges since he was abducted in neighbouring Kenya in November 2024. He and his associate Obeid Lutale had been repeatedly denied bail on unclear grounds. The recent arrest of renowned human rights defender Sarah Bireete, as well as the Government’s recent directive imposing a blanket ban on live broadcasting of “riots” and “unlawful processions” were the latest in a series of concerning developments.

Security forces, including police, the military and the Joint Anti-Terrorism Task Force, had unlawfully used firearms and live ammunition to disperse peaceful assemblies in the lead up to the elections, and to carry out arbitrary arrests and prolonged pre-trial detentions, particularly targeting the political opposition. Security forces often used unmarked vans –known as “drones” – to abduct opposition party members and supporters and held them in incommunicado detention at unauthorised sites known as “safe houses”.

All those responsible for election-related human rights violations, including unresolved violations from the 2021 elections, needed to be held to account through fair proceedings following effective, thorough, and impartial investigations.

To read the full report, click here.


Announcements

Alessandra Vellucci, Director of the United Nations Information Service (UNIS) in Geneva, said the United Nations flag was flying at half-mast today as a mark of respect for the victims of the tragic fire in Crans-Montana, Switzerland, in the framework of the mourning day declared by the latter. The United Nations family extended its deepest condolences to the bereaved families and stood in solidarity with the wounded.

Jens Laerke for the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and Ricardo Pires for the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) also expressed condolences and sympathy with the victims, survivors, family and friends across the world who were affected by this tragedy.

Ms. Vellucci said the Committee on the Rights of the Child would open next Monday morning at 10 a.m. its one hundredth session (12-30 January, Palais Wilson), during which it would review the reports of Maldives, Ghana, Uganda, Pakistan, Ethiopia, Colombia, Spain and Malaysia. The Committee would further have a meeting with States in the afternoon of Thursday, 29 January.

***

Teleprompter
[Other language spoken]
[Other language spoken]
Welcome to the press briefing of the Information Service here in Geneva.
Today is Friday 9th of January 2026.
You may have seen that the UN flag at the office here is being thrown half mast today as a sign of solidarity for the victims of the terrible fire that claimed so many lives amid so many wounded people in Montana during the end of the year.
We join, we we participate in the morning of the of the Swiss that the Swiss government has, the morning that the Swiss government has declared for today.
And we really would like to express again all the solidarity and our condolences for the victims and our solidarity for their families and for the wounded ones.
So that is why the half mast flag is flowing today.
I like now to start the briefing with a couple of points that concerns the situation in Sudan.
Yancey's here to tell us about this terrible anniversary.
Yeah, if we can call it like that of one 1000 days of war in this stone countries.
And then we will hear from Ricard about the situation of the children in this terrible conflict.
So I'll start with the ends now.
[Other language spoken]
Thank you, Alessandra, and good morning, everyone.
Also, on behalf of Ocha, I wish to express our condolences and sympathies with the victims, survivors, family, friends from so many countries who were struck and were hit and bereaved over the New Year here in Carmontana in Switzerland.
Having said that, let me just read the note that I have on the situation in Sudan today.
The 9th of January 2026 marks 1000 days since the start of the war in Sudan, 1000 days of civilians paying the price for a war they did not choose.
Nearly 34 million people need humanitarian support and the scale of suffering is staggering.
The entire region suffers from the spillover of the crisis.
[Other language spoken]
Sudan is the largest displacement crisis in the world.
9.3 million people are uprooted inside the country and more than 4.3 million have fled across borders, placing immense strain on neighbouring countries.
At the same time, large scale population movements have been recorded in Khartoum, where people return to a capital ravaged by the war and littered with explosive hazards.
Fighting continues across multiple fronts.
In Quarterfund, sieges have cut off the towns of Kadugli and dealing, restricting food, healthcare and access to farms and markets.
In Darfur, fighting on the ground and drone attacks from the sky continue and we have seen long range strikes on civilian infrastructure far beyond the front lines.
Famine has been confirmed in Al Fascia and Kadugli, with at least 20 other areas at risk.
More than 21 million people are currently estimated to be acutely food insecure across the country.
Horrifying reports continue to emerge of alleged violations of international law committed during the Rapid Support Forces takeover of Al fascia in late October, including mass killings.
Women are bearing the heaviest burden, sexual violence and abuse is rampant and nearly 12 million people, mostly women and girls, are at risk of gender based violence.
Female headed households are now three times more likely to be food insecure.
3/4 of these households report not having enough to eat.
Hunger is becoming increasingly gendered.
The health system in Sudan is also collapsing.
Less than half of health facilities are fully functional, with significantly lower coverage in areas of active conflict where it is needed the most.
Cholera has been reported in all 18 states in Sudan, with over 72,000 suspected cases last year alone.
In West Cordovan and I Jazeera states, women report giving birth in overcrowded shelters, in schools and on the move without clean water, light or medical support.
Humanitarians are delivering where we can.
Nearly 19 million people were reached in 2025, with local and women LED organisations leading from the front.
These groups are often the 1st and sometimes the only responders in hard to reach and high risk areas, and they are facing growing threats to their safety.
More than 125 humanitarian workers have been killed since April 2023 and access remains dangerous, inconsistent and politically constrained.
Funding for the response, as elsewhere, is falling short.
Only 36% of our 4.2 billion appeal last year was funded.
Cuts in financial support have forced an even tighter prioritisation of the response in 2026.
Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan partners aim to assist some 20 million people out of the nearly 34 million people estimated to require humanitarian support in Sudan.
[Other language spoken]
dollars is required to implement this plan, which is in fact 70% of last year's asks, only 70% of what we asked last year.
This reduction reflects the realities of the current funding environment, not of the level of needs on the ground.
1000 days is nearly half the last World war and today our call is urgent.
First, an immediate cessation of hostilities and real steps towards as lasting peace.
Second, adherence to international humanitarian law with access facilitated across conflict lines and protection of civilians including aid workers and civilian infrastructure.
And 3rd, a renewed push on funding with particular emphasis on supporting local networks, women LED organisations and national partners who remain front and centre of this response.
[Other language spoken]
Thank you very much Jens Ricardo.
[Other language spoken]
Good morning everyone.
Just before I start, I echo the words of Jens on behalf of UNICEF, of our deepest condolences and sentiments to all the victims, families, friends, all those impacted by the tragedy that happened over the New Year in Carmontana.
So let me start and I will try not to repeat too many messages that he has delivered from OCHA, because obviously there's a lot of cross cutting between our agencies and the work that we're doing on the ground.
But from a UNICEF standpoint, focusing on children, today also marks a very grim milestone.
1000 days since war erupted in Sudan.
11000 days of agony for millions of children across the country.
[Other language spoken]
For the children of Sudan, the world is 1000 days late.
Since April 2023, Sudan has become perhaps the largest and most devastating humanitarian crisis in the world.
More than 33 million people, two 2/3 of the population, now need urgent humanitarian assistance.
Half of them are children.
[Other language spoken]
More than 5 million children have been forced from their homes.
That is the equivalent of 5000 children displaced every single day since this conflict began.
Many have been displaced not once, but repeatedly, with violence following them wherever they flee.
Children continue to be killed and injured.
Just this week, eight children were reportedly killed in an attack in Al Al Obeyed N Kordofan.
Famine has been confirmed in Al Fasher and Kadugli, with twenty additional areas at risk.
Across Greater Darfur and Greater Cortofan, an estimated 21 million people face acute food insecurity this year.
Many of them are children.
In North Darfur, the epicentre of Sudan's malnutrition emergency, nearly 85,000 children are suffering with severe acute malnutrition and were treated between January and November last year.
That is one child every six minutes.
Across Sudan, measles and other vaccine preventable diseases are resurgent as immunity immunity gaps widen.
Outbreaks have already been reported in several localities, with a growing risk of large, large scale transmission in overcrowded camps and remote communities.
Measles vaccine coverage has dropped 46% and routine immunisation as measured by the 1st dose of diphtheria, tetanus and produces vaccine, the DP, The DTP one fell to just 48% in 2024, threatening decades of progress in child health.
The situation is specially alarming in the Darfur states where thousands of children are missing out on life saving vaccines due to insecurity, displacement and limited access to health facilities.
Persistent access challenges, including roadblocks and ongoing violence, continue to hamper efforts to deliver essential health services to the most vulnerable children.
And there is another dimension to this crisis that we cannot ignore.
Sexual violence is being used as a weapon of war.
Millions of children are at risk of rape.
Survivors include children as as young as one year old.
Behind every one of these numbers is a child, frightened, Hungry, sick and wondering why the world has not come to help.
Despite extraordinary, extraordinary insecurity, access constraints, UNICEF and partners continue to deliver life saving assistance wherever we can.
We are treating severe acute malnutrition, severe malnutrition.
We're vaccinating children against deadly diseases.
In fact, we started a vaccination campaign campaign in the Darfur's this week.
We are providing safe war and protection services to those affected by violence and displacement.
These efforts are keeping children alive.
But let me be clear, they are not enough.
Humanitarian action can save lives, but it cannot replace the protection that only peace can provide.
UNICEF is urgently calling for an immediate end to the fighting.
All parties must uphold their obligation under international humanitarian law.
Protect civilians, stop attacks on hospitals, schools and water systems, and allow safe, sustained and unimpeded access across Sudan.
Children in Sudan are not statistics.
They're frightened, displaced and hungry.
But they're also determined, resourceful and resilient.
Every day they strive to learn, to play, to hope, even as they wait for the world to act.
Ending this conflict is not a political ask.
It is a moral necessity.
[Other language spoken]
Children cannot wait.
[Other language spoken]
Thank you very much.
Ricardo Enyans questions in the room.
I don't see any hand up.
Let me see on the platform.
[Other language spoken]
Yeah, I'm sorry.
[Other language spoken]
Thanks for the taking my question.
A couple of questions to Jens please.
I wonder if you know can just say when was kid ugly cut off, how long has that been completely isolated and what is the level of access for UN agencies at the moment to El Fascia?
And the third question is, I mean, Sudan is one of the 17 countries that is supposed to be receiving assistance from the United States under the $2 billion that were announced at the end of last year.
What is the status of the discussions about an MOU for providing aid to Sudan?
Is any funding actually coming through at this point from the United States?
[Other language spoken]
[Other language spoken]
Let me take it in reverse order in indeed Sudan is one of the countries that will benefit from from the $2 billion announcement that was made recently from the United States.
As you know, the memorandum of understanding that kind of guides this allocation is a framework agreement and that will then be replicated in the individual countries including Sudan with Mous specifically for the for the money going to that crisis.
In fact, we are looking at Sudan as the first country to create such an Mou with the Americans for their allocation.
So trying to push that particular crisis to the forefront for this allocation.
So that was the first thing access to Al fascia is still heavily constrained.
I'll have to look up what exactly is the status of of today, but it's not where it needs to be The same for the exact date from when Kadugli was is considered under siege.
I'll have to look that up as well.
But both what Kadugli is as of today remains on the siege and we can't respond as we should.
[Other language spoken]
Thank you very much.
[Other language spoken]
[Other language spoken]
[Other language spoken]
Thank you for this briefing.
[Other language spoken]
Jens, you said hunger is becoming increasingly gendered.
Can you explain why that is?
And you mentioned many female headed households, 3/4 in fact are reporting not having enough to eat.
Can you just give the figure for how many female headed households there are in Sudan?
[Other language spoken]
And second question, is the UN planning another visit to Al Fashir?
I know there was one for a few hours in in in December.
Are there any plans for a further visit this month?
[Other language spoken]
[Other language spoken]
[Other language spoken]
But let me take the, the second one.
We cannot say for sure how many female headed household there are exactly in the entire country of Sudan.
We don't know, I don't think anyone knows that.
But what we can do is that we can survey particular groups within the country and then we can make statistics out of that.
And that is what we're doing.
And that's where we, we for example, can conclude that female headed households are three times more likely to be food insecure than those household led by men.
And that's what I mean by that.
The hunger situation is increasingly gendered.
So that is kind of a, a snapshot.
It may be, it may be you may be able to extrapolate to the entire country, but statistically we cannot do that at the moment.
And if you could repeat the first question, please.
Yes, it was just wanting an explanation as to why that is why you're seeing women, female led households being more likely to be going without food.
And this the other part was, is the UN planning another visit, visit to El Fascia after the one in December.
Yeah, on the, on, on the visit.
I don't have anything on on my agenda, but that may that may change very quickly.
And and if there is a visit coming up, of course we will inform you about that.
Why female headed household are particularly vulnerable.
I think there's there's a complex background to that.
We see that in very many crisis there may there may be pre-existing.
[Other language spoken]
Cultural conditions that make women headed household fragile and vulnerable in the 1st place even in the absence of a war.
But what happens when conflict and war erupts?
Everything that's bad already gets worse.
That's kind of the the general picture of it.
So you may have a country where women do not enjoy equality.
When conflict breaks out, that inequality increases.
[Other language spoken]
It happens every single time, unfortunately.
And of course we should do everything we can to fight them.
And that's why when we talk about a push for funding, we point specifically to female and women death organisations because they do of course have special knowledge, special access, particular understanding of what these household needs.
So it's very important that these particular frontline women LED NGOs are supported.
[Other language spoken]
[Other language spoken]
Yes, Boris, Boris Singleton, the local freelancer.
[Other language spoken]
I'll I find the answers you give to the question of my colleagues quite enlightening.
But what in the initial lengthy statement we heard?
What didn't the world ourself already know?
One of the tragedies of the crisis in in Sudan is that we have been talking about it since day one, for 1000 days now.
So hopefully I would say there's nothing new in my statement because these are things that we have repeated again and again.
The problem is that we have not seen the action the that should be taken to to address this from the international community in terms of peacemaking, in terms of funding for our response, in terms of support to getting the access that we need.
So for as long as this continues, we will treat it as a high priority and that's what we brief about in these briefings, our high priority crisis.
Thank you very much.
[Other language spoken]
So thanks Ricardo.
Ask Marta to come to the parliament while she is coming and speaking about children and human rights.
Just to inform you that we have the First Committee of the Year, Committee on the Rights of the Child, which will open next Monday morning at 10 AM is 100 session.
That will last until the 30th of January.
Pari Wilson The countries that they will review under this session are Maldives, Ghana, Uganda, Pakistan, Ethiopia, Colombia, Spain and Malaysia.
So we will remind you these countries while they come under review.
And this has given Marta the time to sit down, and I'll invite her to start her briefing on Uganda and the concerns about the elections which are upcoming.
Good morning, everyone.
Next week's elections in Uganda will take place in an environment marked by widespread repression and intimidation against the political opposition, human rights defenders, journalists and those who dissenting voices.
See the report that we have published today.
It says Ugandan authorities have used a series of flaws enacted or amended since the last election in 2021, entrenching repression and impunity, particularly against the position and restricting the rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly.
Ahead of the 15 January presidential and parliamentary elections, High Commissioner Fogartur calls on the Ugandan authorities to uphold the rights of all Ugandans to take part in the public affairs of the country fully and safely and is their right under international law.
They must, among others, ensure that no unnecessary or disproportionate force, including lethal force, is used to disperse peaceful protest on Election Day and begin.
Ugandan authorities have arrested and detained opposition leaders and activists, raided the premises of political opposition parties and confiscated their property.
They have also suspended radio stations, arrested bloggers and tightened control over NGOs.
Leading an opposition figure, Kizza Besije remains in detention unquestionable treason charges since he was abducted in neighbouring Kenya in November 2024.
He and his associated of eight Lutale have been repeatedly denied bailed on unclear grounds.
The recent arrest of renowned human rights defender Sara Birette and the government's directive imposing a blanket ban on live broadcasting of what it describes as riots and unlawful processions are the latest in a series of concerning developments.
The security forces, including police, the military and the Joint Anti Terrorist Task Force have unlawfully used firearms and life ammunition to disperse peaceful assemblies and to carry out arbitrary arrests and prolonged pretrial detentions.
Particularly targeting the position after using unmarked bans, commonly known as drones, to abduct opposition parties, members and supporters and hold them in in communicated attention at unauthorised sites known as safe houses.
All those responsible for election related human rights violations, including unresolved violations from the 2021 elections, must be held to account through fair proceedings following effective, thorough and impartial investigations.
[Other language spoken]
Thank you very much Berta.
Questions on Uganda directorial process, I don't see any end up my rights.
[Other language spoken]
[Other language spoken]
So thank you very much Martha.
And yeah, actually I have read you the announcement that I had.
So I think this concludes this briefing and I thank you very much for following it and have a nice weekend.
We'll see each other on Tuesday next week.
[Other language spoken]