Bleak Women’s Day in South Sudan, where #MeToo has no impact
JUBA, South Sudan — Wiping tears from her cheeks, the young woman describes how she has resorted to prostitution to feed her children.
When South Sudan’s civil war broke out in 2013, her family fled their home to avoid violence. Her husband took her and their two children to a U.N. camp for safety. He has not been seen since then and is presumed dead. Bright and resourceful, she found offers of work as a cleaner and a waitress, but she said her male employers demanded sex.
“If you refuse to sleep with them, you’ll never get a job,” said Nancy, who spoke on condition of not publishing her full name.
“They’ll tell you to come tomorrow for work but then start calling you the night before asking to sleep in your house,” she said of the hiring managers. If she didn’t respond to their demands, she’d show up to work the next day only to find that another woman had taken her place.


