Sudan Site Management Cluster Report - June 2025

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  • In June, the Site Management Cluster partners reached 226,172 IDPs, including 186,901 individuals through site mapping and assessments across more than 43 IDP sites. Partners conducted 7 awareness-raising sessions, established 9 Site Management Committees, facilitated 136 referrals, and supported 7 complaints and feedback mechanisms. Additionally, 3,250 IDPs received site maintenance support in-kind. However, of the 1.9 million people targeted nationally, only 479,463 individuals (25%) have been reached to date.

  • According to DTM mobility update 19 as of 25 June 2025, Sudan hosted 10,065,329 IDPs, of whom 7.66 million were newly displaced since 15 April 2023. The trend shows a 13% reduction from January figures, largely due to returns in Khartoum, Sennar, and Aj Jazirah.

  • Darfur remains the epicenter of displacement, with North and South Darfur each hosting 18% of the caseload, and Central Darfur holding 10%. Together, they account for nearly half of all IDPs in Sudan.

  • Notable declines in IDP presence were recorded in Kassala (-30%), Gedaref (-11%), and White Nile (-4%), possibly reflecting spontaneous returns or secondary movements.

  • Flood-related displacement surged in Gedaref, Blue Nile, and White Nile, increasing informal site formations and exposing IDPs to heightened risks from poor site conditions.

  • IDPs remain largely reliant on inadequate shelter arrangements: 47% with host families, 22% in open/informal areas, and 17% in camps. For example, North Darfur has 46% of IDPs in gathering sites, pointing to severe Site Management needs.

  • Children represent 53% of the displaced population, with girls under 18 making up 29%, flagging urgent needs for age- and gender-sensitive site protection in displacement hotspots like Central Darfur, Blue Nile, and Red Sea.

In White Nile, non-Sudanese IDPs—primarily South Sudanese nationals—constitute 16% of the displaced population, emphasizing the need for a Site Management approach that integrates mixed forced displacement considerations

YEAR PUBLISHED
2025
RESOURCE TYPE
Report
THEME
Coordination
COUNTRY OF OPERATION
Sudan