U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
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USCRI Deeply Alarmed by DHS Decision to Terminate TPS for South Sudan Amid Escalating Violence and Humanitarian Crisis

November 7, 2025

Arlington, VA — November 7, 2025 — The U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI) is deeply alarmed by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) termination of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for South Sudan, effective January 5, 2026. This decision undermines both the humanitarian purpose of the TPS program and the United States’ longstanding commitment to protecting individuals from returning to life-threatening conditions.

DHS justified the termination by asserting that South Sudan no longer faces armed conflict posing serious risks to returning nationals. Yet, just last week on October 29, the Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan warned in an address to the United Nations (UN) General Assembly that “once again, civilians are being bombarded, women are being raped, children are being displaced and forcefully recruited into combat roles, and entire communities are living in fear…” The Commission underscored that South Sudan’s “political transition is falling apart” and that the “peace agreement’s key provisions are being systematically violated.”

As fighting intensifies, South Sudan remains in a dire humanitarian and displacement crisis. Over 445,000 people have fled their homes in South Sudan this year alone according to the International Committee on the Red Cross. Over 2.3 million refugees from South Sudan have sought safety in neighboring countries and more than 1.4 million others remain internally displaced.

South Sudan also faces an acute food insecurity crisis, largely driven by escalating conflict. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) report released November 4  found that over 7.5 million people in the country will likely face crisis or worse levels of hunger between April to July 2026 (see more about IPC’s Classification system here). The UN has warned that without urgent humanitarian assistance in affected areas of South Sudan, the food and nutrition crisis will only deepen.

Using the fact that South Sudan has not yet plunged back into “full-scale civil war” as justification for this termination is fundamentally inconsistent with the statutory purpose and intent of the TPS program. Treating a fragile and rapidly deteriorating peace as evidence of conditions for safe return ignores the worsening conditions that would place returning South Sudanese nationals at extreme risk of harm, violence, persecution, and life-threatening insecurity.

USCRI urges the Administration to immediately reverse the TPS termination for South Sudan and instead provide an 18-month extension and redesignation. We further call on Congress and the Administration to reaffirm U.S. leadership in protecting displaced persons and upholding humanitarian principles at a time when lives hang in the balance.

For more, see USCRI’s piece, “Navigating Instability: A Country Conditions Overview of South Sudan” published in September 2025.

 

USCRI, founded in 1911, is a non-governmental, not-for-profit international organization committed to working on behalf of refugees and immigrants and their transition to a dignified life.

For press inquiries, please contact:[email protected].


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