Malakal, 17 November, 2025 / 9:19 pm (ACI Africa).
The United Nations has announced that it is downsizing its security operations in South Sudan, a decision that Catholic Bishops in the country and the neighbouring Sudan say spells doom for innocent civilians.
In a statement on November 11, Under-Secretary-General for UN Peace Operations, Jean-Pierre Lacroix cited financial constraints, noting that South Sudan President Salva Kiir was aware of the decision, which includes reductions of national and international staff, as well as the closure of some UNMISS offices in the embattled country.
Lacroix said that the UN's contingency plan, “applied across all UN peacekeeping operations to address liquidity challenges, is now being implemented in UNMISS.”
“This plan entails the closure of certain field offices and bases, the repatriation of uniformed personnel, which has already begun, and reductions of national and international staff,” Lacroix says in the report, and adds, “During my recent visit to Juba, I informed the Government of South Sudan, including President Salva Kiir, of these measures, emphasizing the financial imperatives driving this exercise.”
In a message they issued at the end of their November 7-14 Plenary Assembly, members of the Sudan and South Sudan Catholic Bishops’ Conference (SSS-CBC) said that they were “disturbed” by the news that the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) was downsizing.



