Ambassador Lumumba Maklele Nyajok and Technology Leaders Discuss Digital Innovations to Address South Sudan’s Complex Humanitarian Emergency
NEW DELHI, NOVEMBER 8, 2025 – In a significant diplomatic engagement, His Excellency Lumumba Maklele Nyajok, Ambassador of the Republic of South Sudan to India, met with technology leaders and humanitarian advocates to explore innovative digital solutions for addressing the unprecedented humanitarian crisis unfolding in his nation. The meeting signals a growing recognition among South Sudan’s diplomatic community of the transformative potential of technology in delivering aid, coordinating responses, and building resilience in conflict-affected communities.
The discussions centered on leveraging digital tools, data management systems, and technology- driven approaches to enhance humanitarian aid effectiveness in South Sudan—a nation grappling with one of the world’s most severe humanitarian emergencies.
The Humanitarian Crisis: Scale and Urgency
The statistics are sobering and demand urgent action. South Sudan is facing a multifaceted humanitarian catastrophe that defies easy comprehension:
Crisis in Numbers
Humanitarian Needs:
9+ million people require humanitarian assistance—approximately 80% of South Sudan’s total population
4.9 million children are in urgent need of humanitarian support
9.3 million people projected in need for 2025, reflecting the deteriorating situation
Displacement Crisis:
2+ million internally displaced persons (IDPs) have fled their homes due to conflict, violence, and flooding
2.3 million refugees living outside South Sudan’s borders, seeking refuge in neighboring countries
Since the Sudan conflict began in April 2023, over 996,648 individuals, including 498,293 children, have entered South Sudan as refugees and returnees—representing an 8% increase in South Sudan’s total population
Impact of Floods and Conflict:
1.4+ million people affected by flooding across 44 counties in 2024 alone
397,000 new displacements recorded between January and August 2025
Conflict and violence have disrupted humanitarian operations, with over 400 incidents reported in 2024—a 16% increase compared to 2023
Health Emergencies
Cholera Outbreak (2024-2025):
91,617 suspected cholera cases reported as of August 2025
1,555 cholera-related deaths with a Case Fatality Rate (CFR) of 1.7%
Affected 55 counties across 9 states and 3 Administrative Areas
Children disproportionately affected: Ages 0-4 years account for 24% of cases; ages 5-14 years represent 22% of cases
Malaria Crisis:
As previously documented in Unity State alone: 13,639 cases and 12 deaths in just four months (July-October 2025)
Estimated 5.5 million annual malaria cases nationwide with over 4,380 deaths
Disease accounts for 52-66.8% of outpatient consultations and 30-50% of mortality in the country
Acute Malnutrition:
650,000 children at risk of severe acute malnutrition
2.1 million people affected by acute malnutrition
484,502 children aged 6-59 months admitted for severe wasting treatment
Food Security Crisis
6.3 million people classified in IPC Phase 3 or above (crisis or worse) in 2024
7.7 million people projected to face severe food insecurity in 2025 lean season
1.7 million individuals facing critical acute food insecurity (IPC Phase 4 Emergency or higher)
Hardest hit regions: Jonglei, Northern Bahr el Ghazal, Upper Nile, Unity, and Warrap States
Humanitarian Access Constraints
70+ incidents reported in August 2025 alone
371 incidents recorded between January and August 2025
Violence against humanitarian staff, compounds, and supplies escalating
Armed clashes and airstrikes disrupting aid delivery
Administrative obstacles and adverse weather compounding access challenges
Critical Funding Gap
The humanitarian response is severely underfunded:
Humanitarian Action for Children (HAC) appeal only 19% funded as of August 2025
$278.2 million required with only a fraction received
Education: 96% funding gap
WASH (Water, Sanitation & Hygiene): 90% funding gap
Health services: 83% funding gap
Child protection: 73% funding gap
Nutrition programs: 72% funding gap
These funding shortfalls directly translate into unnecessary suffering and preventable deaths among the most vulnerable populations.
Ambassador Nyajok: A Committed Voice for South Sudan
His Excellency Lumumba Maklele Nyajok has emerged as a determined advocate for South Sudan’s development and humanitarian response, despite the extraordinary challenges facing his nation.
Presenting his credentials to the President of India in July 2024, Ambassador Nyajok has since worked tirelessly to strengthen India-South Sudan relations and mobilize international support for his country’s crisis response.
In the meeting, Ambassador Nyajok emphasized South Sudan’s need for immediate technological support to:
- Enhance Coordination: Improve real-time communication and data sharing among humanitarian organizations operating across the country
- Optimize Resource Allocation: Use data-driven approaches to ensure aid reaches the most vulnerable populations
- Strengthen Surveillance: Deploy early warning systems for disease outbreaks and natural disasters
- Empower Communities: Provide local organizations with digital tools for self-assessment, planning, and advocacy
- Build Resilience: Create sustainable technology infrastructure that supports long-term development beyond the emergency phase
Technology as a Game-Changer: Evidence from the Field
The potential of technology to transform humanitarian aid is not theoretical—it has been proven in South Sudan and similar contexts:
Real-World Successes
Pharmaceutical Supply Tracking:
International Medical Corps deployed an app to track pharmaceutical supplies in South Sudan
Out-of-stock rates for medicines reduced from 32% to 3%
Clinic wait times cut from 85 minutes to 15 minutes
Impact: Thousands more patients received timely medical care with existing resources
Community-Based Information Networks:
Youth Empowerment and Development Aid (YEDA) established community networks in hard-to- reach areas
Equipped village representatives with mobile phones, radios, and portable solar panels
Result: Real-time, two-way communication between internally displaced persons and humanitarian actors
Outcome: Better targeting of aid, prioritization of underserved areas, and life-saving information delivery
Digital Humanitarian Collaboration:
RISE South Sudan consortium trained local NGOs and community-based organizations (CBOs) in digital project management
Implemented collaborative digital platforms for data collection, analysis, and visualization
Impact: Enhanced community resilience, improved preparedness, and coordinated emergency response
Cloud-Based Disaster Response:
AWS disaster response teams utilized cloud infrastructure during humanitarian crises
Results: Rapid situation assessment, common operating picture, interim connectivity for response coordination
Efficiency gains: Faster deployment of aid, better resource coordination, enhanced situational awareness
Digital Innovation Areas with High Potential for South Sudan
- Telemedicine: Bring advanced medical care to war-wounded victims and disease outbreak patients in remote areas
- Digital Cash Transfers: Enable faster economic assistance and increased autonomy for aid recipients
- Satellite Technology: Real-time monitoring of flooding, conflict zones, and displacement patterns
- Drone Assessments: Rapid damage assessment after disasters without exposing personnel to danger
- Mobile Data Collection: Community health workers using smartphones for disease surveillance and nutrition monitoring
- Facial Recognition: Help reunite separated families torn apart by conflict and displacement
- Early Warning Systems: Predictive analytics for disease outbreaks, food security crises, and conflict escalation
- Blockchain for Transparency: Track aid distribution and prevent diversion of humanitarian supplies
- AI-Powered Logistics: Optimize supply chain management for medicine, food, and emergency supplies
- Community Engagement Platforms: Enable marginalized communities to voice needs and participate in planning
Strategic Framework: Technology Solutions for South Sudan
Immediate Priorities (0-6 Months)
Emergency Response Enhancement:
Deploy mobile-based disease surveillance systems for real-time reporting of cholera, malaria, measles, and other disease outbreaks
Establish digital supply chain tracking for pharmaceuticals, medical equipment, and emergency supplies
Create WhatsApp and SMS-based communication networks for humanitarian coordination in areas with limited internet
Develop offline-capable apps for community health workers in areas without reliable connectivity
Data Integration:
Consolidate humanitarian data from multiple agencies into unified dashboards for better coordination
Implement real-time population movement tracking using aggregated mobile phone data (with privacy protections)
Create early warning systems for disease outbreaks and food insecurity crises
Medium-Term Priorities (6-18 Months)
Community Capacity Building:
Train 5,000+ community health workers in digital tools and data collection
Establish digital literacy programs in local languages (Nuer, Dinka, Shilluk, Arabic, English)
Empower local NGOs and CBOs with project management and data analytics platforms
Deploy community-based monitoring networks using affordable smartphones and solar charging stations
Infrastructure Development:
Install solar-powered communication towers in remote areas to improve connectivity
Establish community information centers with internet access and charging stations
Create redundant communication systems that function during network outages
Long-Term Priorities (18+ Months)
Sustainable Systems:
Develop locally-managed digital health information systems integrated with national health architecture
Build South Sudanese technical capacity through training programs in software development and data analysis
Create national disaster management systems with early warning capabilities
Establish social protection registries using digital identification for equitable aid distribution
Innovation Hub:
Establish a South Sudan Humanitarian Technology Hub to develop local solutions
Partner with universities and research institutions to adapt global innovations for local context
Foster private sector engagement through impact investing and corporate social responsibility programs
Multi-Stakeholder Partnership Framework
Successful implementation requires coordination across multiple sectors:
Government Leadership
Ministry of Health and Sanitation (disease surveillance, health information systems)
Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management (coordination platform)
Ministry of Cabinet Affairs (policy environment and regulatory framework)
International Organizations
WHO: Disease surveillance and health system strengthening
UNICEF: Child-focused data collection and WASH monitoring
WFP: Food security tracking and supply chain optimization
UNHCR: Displacement monitoring and refugee tracking
IOM: Migration management and population movement data
OCHA: Humanitarian coordination platform
Technology Sector
Cloud service providers (AWS, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure) for data hosting and analytics
Mobile technology companies for connectivity solutions
Software development firms for custom solutions
Cybersecurity partners for data protection
Civil Society
Local NGOs and community-based organizations
Youth-led innovation groups
Women’s organizations for targeted outreach
Faith-based organizations for community mobilization
India-South Sudan Cooperation
Indian tech companies’ expertise in mobile solutions and affordable technology
India’s experience in digital governance and health information systems
Indian universities’ research capabilities in humanitarian technology
Development partnerships through bilateral cooperation mechanisms
Alignment with Global Development Frameworks
This technology-enabled humanitarian response directly supports:
UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 2030)
SDG 3: Good Health and Well-Being
Target 3.3: End epidemics of AIDS, TB, malaria, and neglected tropical diseases
Target 3.8: Achieve universal health coverage and access to safe medicines
Target 3.9: Reduce deaths from hazardous chemicals and pollution
SDG 1: No Poverty
Target 1.3: Implement nationally appropriate social protection systems
Target 1.5: Build resilience of the poor to climate and economic shocks
SDG 5: Gender Equality
Target 5.5: Ensure women’s participation in decision-making
Target 5.b: Enhance use of ICT to promote women’s empowerment
SDG 17: Partnerships for the Goals
Target 17.8: Enhance international cooperation on technology and innovation
African Union Agenda 2063
Aspiration 1: A prosperous Africa based on inclusive growth and sustainable development
Goal: Healthy and well-nourished citizens with adequate levels of health investment
Africa Digital Transformation Strategy (2020-2030)
Focus: Leveraging digital technologies for development and service delivery
South Sudan National Development Strategy
Priorities:
Universal Health Coverage through strengthened health systems
Emergency response and humanitarian coordination
Conflict prevention and peace consolidation
Economic recovery and social stability
Call to Action: Building the Partnership
The meeting between Ambassador Nyajok and technology leaders opens a critical window of opportunity. The international community—particularly technology companies, governments, and humanitarian organizations—must act urgently to:
For Technology Companies
Contribute expertise and discounted or pro-bono services for humanitarian response
Deploy scalable, affordable solutions designed for low-connectivity environments
Invest in local capacity building and knowledge transfer
Commit to data security and privacy protections for vulnerable populations
For Governments (Including India)
Allocate development assistance specifically for humanitarian technology
Create regulatory environments that facilitate rapid technology deployment during crises
Support digital infrastructure investment in South Sudan
Share best practices from their own humanitarian technology initiatives
For International Organizations
Coordinate technology platforms to avoid duplication and silos
Advocate for increased funding for technology-enabled solutions
Support South Sudanese leadership in identifying technology priorities
Provide technical assistance for implementation and sustainability
For Private Sector & Impact Investors
Develop sustainable business models for humanitarian technology services
Invest in South Sudanese social enterprises working on technology solutions
Support technology entrepreneurship among youth and women
Create employment opportunities through technology-enabled services
For Humanitarian Organizations
Integrate technology into humanitarian response strategies
Train staff in digital tools and data management
Participate in coordination platforms to share information and resources
Advocate for adequate funding for technology components of humanitarian programs
For South Sudan’s Government & Leadership
Demonstrate political commitment to technology-enabled governance
Create institutional mechanisms for coordinating technology initiatives
Invest domestic resources in digital infrastructure
Ensure technology solutions serve South Sudanese priorities, not external agendas
The Human Imperative: Beyond the Statistics
Behind every statistic is a human story—a child suffering from malaria, a mother displaced from her home, a health worker trying to save lives with inadequate resources. When Ambassador Nyajok discusses technological support for his country’s crisis, he is speaking for millions of voiceless people whose lives hang in balance.
Technology alone cannot resolve South Sudan’s political conflicts or restore social stability. However, it can:
Save lives through better disease surveillance and health service coordination
Reduce suffering by ensuring aid reaches those most in need
Empower communities to participate in solutions affecting their own lives
Build resilience so that when crises pass, South Sudan emerges stronger
Restore hope by demonstrating that the international community cares and is taking action
Vision for the Future: A Resilient, Connected South Sudan
Imagine South Sudan in 2030:
Health workers in remote villages have access to telemedicine consultations with specialists, instantly diagnosing malaria and cholera cases
Community leaders monitor disease outbreaks in real time, triggering rapid response before epidemics spiral out of control
Families separated by conflict use digital identification and facial recognition to reunite
Farmers receive weather forecasts and early warnings of flooding through mobile phones, protecting crops and lives
Mothers access maternal health services through digital scheduling and reminders, reducing maternal mortality
Children in displacement camps attend online classes, keeping education alive despite physical displacement
Businesses leverage digital tools to create jobs and rebuild livelihoods in post-conflict communities
Organizations working to build peace share real-time data on conflict trends, enabling early intervention
Aid organizations coordinate seamlessly using integrated digital platforms, eliminating duplication and reaching every person in need
This vision is achievable—not through technology magic, but through deliberate investment, genuine partnership, and sustained commitment to putting South Sudan’s people first.
Conclusion: Seizing the Moment
Ambassador Lumumba Maklele Nyajok’s diplomatic initiative to explore technological solutions for South Sudan’s humanitarian crisis represents a turning point. It signals that South Sudan’s leadership understands the transformative potential of technology and is actively seeking partnerships to leverage it.
The international community must respond with the same urgency and commitment. The window of opportunity to prevent further deterioration of South Sudan’s humanitarian situation is closing rapidly. Every month of delay means more children malnourished, more disease outbreaks undetected, more displacement unaddressed, more suffering unalleviated.
Technology will not end South Sudan’s conflicts or resolve political disputes. But it can amplify the voice of the voiceless, strengthen the hands of those delivering aid, and build the resilience necessary for South Sudan to eventually break free from the cycle of crisis and conflict.
The choice before us is clear: Will we meet this moment with courage and commitment? Will we partner with Ambassador Nyajok and South Sudan’s people to harness technology for humanitarian good? Or will we allow the suffering to continue while possessing the tools and knowledge to prevent it?
History will judge us by our answer.
About the Participants
His Excellency Lumumba Maklele Nyajok
Ambassador of the Republic of South Sudan to India, based at the Embassy of the Republic of South Sudan in New Delhi (F/3/12, Vasant Vihar, New Delhi-110057). Ambassador Nyajok presented his credentials to the President of India in July 2024 and has been working to strengthen bilateral relations between India and South Sudan while mobilizing international support for his country’s humanitarian response.
Technology and Humanitarian Leaders
Participants included representatives from technology companies, humanitarian organizations, development agencies, and civil society organizations committed to leveraging innovation for social impact in crisis-affected contexts.
Media Contact & Partnership Inquiries
For information about technology solutions for South Sudan’s humanitarian crisis, or to discuss partnership opportunities:
Embassy of the Republic of South Sudan New Delhi, India
Email: erss.dlin@gmail.com OR profripuranjansinha@gmail.com
Phone: +91 11 40159287 or +91-960-2570-498
Hours: Monday to Friday, 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM IST
Hashtags for Social Media
#StandWithSouthSudan #ChildrenFirst #HumanitarianAid #TechForGood #DisasterResponse
#GlobalSolidarity #HopeInAction #IndiaSouthSudan #DigitalHumanitarianResponse
#SustainableDevelopment #SDG2030 #AgendaAfrica2063
Key Facts to Remember
Over 9 million people (80% of population) require humanitarian assistance
4.9 million children facing acute humanitarian needs
13,639 malaria cases and 12 deaths in Unity State alone (July-October 2025)
91,617 cholera cases with 1,555 deaths as of August 2025
2+ million internally displaced, 2.3 million refugees outside the country
Humanitarian response only 19% funded—critical gaps in health, education, WASH, and nutrition
Technology-enabled solutions have proven 75-90% effectiveness in similar contexts
India-South Sudan partnership offers unique opportunities for affordable, scalable technology solutions