At just five years old, South Sudan is the youngest nation in the world. More than half of its entire population is starving. Another 2.3 million have fled their homes, forced to evade rebels by taking refuge in the dense and hopelessly remote swampland. Political instability has trapped citizens in the middle of an ongoing power struggle. Targeted violence, particularly against women, persists in lieu of government protection. Hope of a political solution in South Sudan rests on the horizon. In regions where the blood-soaked earth has yet to produce a single crop in years, people count on food to literally fall from the sky. Airdrops rain down a crucial lifeline for the dozen or so communities made into humanitarian hubs throughout South Sudan, feeding a country that teeters on the brink of famine. Humanitarian groups are increasingly becoming the link between societies unbound by international borders. They are the firefighters who run into burning buildings and stick around to rebuild long after the embers die out. In the latest chapter in an ongoing report on the global refugee crisis for @msnbcphoto photographer @mattblack_blackmatt explores the connection between the much needed aid given to people of South Sudan from its source, the International Humanitarian City, nestled inside the United Arab Emirates’ largest metropolis of Dubai. It’s the beacon of humanity locked inside long stretches of the desert and the point from which aid is distributed to South Sudan and the many other crises around the world. “Warehouses in the Desert: A starving South Sudan's lifeline is locked in a warehouse complex thousands of miles away” is written by Amanda Sakuma. #‎SouthSudan #‎MigrantCrisis #‎refugees #‎UAE #‎Dubai#‎InternationalHumanitarianCity #‎IHC #‎HumanitarianAid #‎MagnumPhotosMSNBC Photography This image: A World Food Programme airplane drops bags of grain to Ganyiel. Ganyiel is a small community that has become a safe haven and a center for relief distribution for over 90,000 people in the conflict-torn nation of South Sudan. Unity State, Ganyiel, South Sudan. 2016. © #MattBlack/#MagnumPhotos

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At just five years old, South Sudan is the youngest nation in the world. More than half of its entire population is starving. Another 2.3 million have fled their homes, forced to evade rebels by taking refuge in the dense and hopelessly remote swampland. Political instability has trapped citizens in the middle of an ongoing power struggle. Targeted violence, particularly against women, persists in lieu of government protection. Hope of a political solution in South Sudan rests on the horizon. In regions where the blood-soaked earth has yet to produce a single crop in years, people count on food to literally fall from the sky. Airdrops rain down a crucial lifeline for the dozen or so communities made into humanitarian hubs throughout South Sudan, feeding a country that teeters on the brink of famine. Humanitarian groups are increasingly becoming the link between societies unbound by international borders. They are the firefighters who run into burning buildings and stick around to rebuild long after the embers die out.

In the latest chapter in an ongoing report on the global refugee crisis for @msnbcphoto photographer @mattblack_blackmatt explores the connection between the much needed aid given to people of South Sudan from its source, the International Humanitarian City, nestled inside the United Arab Emirates’ largest metropolis of Dubai. It’s the beacon of humanity locked inside long stretches of the desert and the point from which aid is distributed to South Sudan and the many other crises around the world. “Warehouses in the Desert: A starving South Sudan's lifeline is locked in a warehouse complex thousands of miles away” is written by Amanda Sakuma.
#‎SouthSudan #‎MigrantCrisis #‎refugees #‎UAE #‎Dubai#‎InternationalHumanitarianCity #‎IHC #‎HumanitarianAid #‎MagnumPhotosMSNBC Photography
This image: A World Food Programme airplane drops bags of grain to Ganyiel. Ganyiel is a small community that has become a safe haven and a center for relief distribution for over 90,000 people in the conflict-torn nation of South Sudan. Unity State, Ganyiel, South Sudan. 2016. © #MattBlack/#MagnumPhotos


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