The UN's 2016 humanitarian response plan for Sudan aims to help up to 4.6 million people, including tens of thousands of South Sudanese refugees who fled to Sudan to escape violence and food shortages.
Of the USD 952 million needed, as of the beginning of August UN aid agencies have managed to raise only USD 242.6 million.
"We still are very, very low in terms of the total funding requirement," Marta Ruedas, the UN resident and humanitarian coordinator for Sudan said at a press conference marking World Humanitarian Day.
The United Nations and its aid agencies had raised USD 604.3 million in 2015 for Sudan after a global appeal for USD 1.04 billion.
While urging the international community to step up its contributions for Sudan, Ruedas said the shortfall could impact the number of people targeted for assistance.
"If we are not able to count on the support of any and all donors to make up that funding, we will have to review our forecast in terms of who we are able to assist," she said.
Food insecurity and the raging conflict in South Sudan has also pushed refugees into Sudan seeking protection and assistance.
The bulk of the funds in 2016 are aimed at meeting the humanitarian needs of people in war-torn Darfur -- a region of the size of France where tens of thousands of people have been killed.
Violence erupted there in 2003 when ethnic minority rebels rose up against President Omar al-Bashir, accusing his Arab-dominated government of marginalising the region.
At least 300,000 people have been killed in the conflict and another 2.5 million have fled their homes, the UN says.
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