Tag: South Sudan

  • South Sudan not falling into genocide – Official

    A senior South Sudanese official has denied a UN report that the war-torn country risked recording genocide due to targeted killings along ethnic lines.

    Deputy Minister of Information, Paul Kordit, told newsmen on Monday that the report by UN Secretary General’s Special Adviser for the Prevention of Genocide, Adama Dieng, was alarming but overstated the situation.

    “I do not think this country can slide into genocide.

    “This country has experience of conflict and emerging from it stronger. I have seen the report but the statement was overstated.

    “What people of South Sudan need are not messages that spread fear but those that give them hope,’’ Kordit added.

    Dieng concluded his fact-finding mission in South Sudan on Friday.

    He observed that the country risked falling into genocide if the government did not intervene to nip the situation in the bud.

    “Inflammatory rhetoric, stereotyping and name-calling have been accompanied by targeted killings and rape of members of particular ethnic groups,’’ Dieng said.

    He called for an end to targeted killings that have caused tension between the Equatorial region’s Bari-speaking tribes and Dinka, the largest ethnic group in South Sudan.

    Civil war broke out in December, 2013, between government troops led by President Salva Kiir and forces loyal to sacked First Vice President, Riek Machar.

    Tens of thousands have died and over two million have been displaced ever since.

    A peace deal signed between the rival leaders under UN pressure in 2015 led to the formation of a unity government in April, but was shattered by renewed fighting that erupted in early July.

    Machar, who had returned to his old post as Kiir’s deputy in the unity government, was sacked again and fled the country after the July fighting.

    He is now in residence in South Africa and has asked his supporters to launch a rebellion.

    Hundreds have been killed and tens of thousands forced out of their homes since July.

  • South Sudan rebel spokesman abducted in Kenya

    South Sudan’s rebel movement on Thursday called on Kenya’s government to help in the search of James Gatdet Dak, its Spokesman, who was kidnapped on Wednesday in his home in Nairobi.

    The Sudan’s People Liberation Movement/Army in Opposition (SPLM/A-IO) said it suspected South Sudanese security officials and Kenyan gangs of being behind the kidnapping.

    SPLM/A-IO Leader Riek Machar is to be in South Africa, where he received medical treatment after fleeing fighting in July.

    Machar first fled the fighting to Congo, from where he moved on to Sudan’s capital Khartoum for treatment.

    A power struggle between South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir and his former deputy Machar escalated into a military conflict in December 2013.

    Tens of thousands have been killed and about 2.5 million displaced.

    The two sides formed a unity government in April, with Machar reinstated as vice president, but the renewed fighting that erupted in July, dashed the hopes of peace.

  • India begins evacuation of citizens from South Sudan

    Indian External Affairs Ministry said that officials and two army aircraft had on Thursday begun the evacuation of an estimated 600 Indians stranded in strife-torn South Sudan.

    Ministry Spokesman, Vikas Swarup, said in New Delhi that Operation Sankat Mochan began at crack of dawn as two C 17 aircraft left for Juba.

    “Sankat mochan in Hindi means the saviour from troubles and usually refers to the monkey god Hanuman with his powers of flying.

    He said VK Singh, a retired General and a Junior Minister for External Affairs, was on board leading the mission.

    Swarup said all Indian nationals with valid travel documents who were in Juba would be flown back to New Delhi.

  • Victims of violence get medical care in South Sudan

    About 40 victims of violence that recently occurred along the Ethiopia-South Sudan border have been admitted to a Red Cross-supported hospital in the Upper Nile region of South Sudan.

    This information is contained in a statement issued by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), in Juba on Thursday.

    It said that Maiwut hospital was providing medical and surgical care to the wounded in the attacks in which nearly 200 people were killed and more than 100 children abducted.

    According to ICRC, many of the wounded, men, women and children are admitted to the hospital suffering from gunshot injuries as a result of the mid-April clashes along the Ethiopian border.

    “The team has been working non-stop to deal with the influx of patients”, said Chiyuki Yoshida, the ICRC hospital project manager in Maiwut.

    “Overcrowding is a challenge since the hospital also continues to receive people affected by severe malnutrition, malaria and violence occurring elsewhere in South Sudan”, he said.

    Maiwut hospital is the only medical facility in Upper Nile region providing surgical and advanced health care to a population of nearly 80,000.

    ICRC said it currently supports seven medical and primary health care facilities in South Sudan. Since January this year its teams have performed more than 1,600 surgeries.

     

  • Bashua leads UN’s investigation of South Sudan attack

    Bashua leads UN’s investigation of South Sudan attack

    United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, has appointed Nigeria’s Abiodun Oluremi Bashua to lead the Special Investigation into the attack against the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) protection of civilians site in Malakal, South Sudan.

    According to a statement from the UN Secretariat, the Special Investigation will undertake a detailed examination of the circumstances which led to the incident from 17 to 18 February in which at least 25 civilians in the site were killed and an additional 144 were injured.

    This investigation will complement the United Nations Headquarters Board of Inquiry announced on 11 March which is conducting an in-depth investigation into the overall response of UNMISS to the incident.

    Bashua recently concluded his assignment as the Deputy Joint Special Representative of the African Union-United Nations Hybrid Operation in Darfur, during which time he also served as the Acting Joint Special Representative in 2014 and 2015.

    He has extensive experience in several United Nations peacekeeping operations in Africa, having served at senior levels in Côte d’Ivoire, Liberia, Sierra Leone and Sudan.

    Bashua was also  Secretary to the Conference of Parties of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

     

  • Look beyond oil, Buhari urges South Sudan

    Look beyond oil, Buhari urges South Sudan

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday urged the South Sudanese government to invest more in agriculture and not to be solely dependent on oil revenues to grow the nation’s economy.

    He gave the advice while receiving the outgoing South Sudanese Ambassador to Nigeria, Ambassador Makuet Riak, at the State House in Abuja.

    In a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, the President said that South Sudan can avoid the mistake made by Nigeria in her over-reliance on oil revenue.

    He told the outgoing envoy that Nigeria’s economy, which has been heavily dependent on oil over the years, has been adversely affected by the drop in global oil prices.

    He said: “Investing in sustainable agriculture is one of the best ways to provide jobs for the people and keep the nation productive.

    “Food security is important to any country and that is what we are trying to achieve here, years after we `threw away’ agriculture for oil,’’ the President said.

    President Buhari also praised the excellent relations between Nigeria and South Sudan and reaffirmed his commitment to strengthening existing bilateral ties.

    In his remarks, Ambassador Riak described his four-year duty tour as his country’s first ambassador to Nigeria as very fruitful.

    He said South Sudan was blessed with fertile land and would welcome more investments from Nigerian companies.

  • Lessons from South Sudan

    Somebody once said that, “The main lesson of history is that we do not learn the lessons of history!” How true. Two weeks ago, the United Nations (UN) released a damning report on the ongoing conflict in South Sudan. Until recently, the conflict has gone off the international radar. The report says soldiers on both sides were allowed to rape women as a form of payment of salaries! As an oil producing nation, the country is also hit by the volatility of global oil price; its situation is worsened by a senseless civil war.

    When it gained independence from Sudan after a brutal civil war in July 2011, there was high expectation for growth and many believed they would not see another conflict in the country they fought so hard and so long for. While the jubilation was on, I read an op-ed written by a British journalist raising some concerns on why he thinks the country may go the way of other post-colonial/conflict African nations.

    One of his major concerns was on the level and maturity of governance. He raised concern over the high number of expensive sports utility vehicles (SUVs) and other exotic cars that were purchased by politicians and government officials immediately after independence in a country with a dearth of infrastructure – especially road networks. He warned that if this continues the post-independence jubilation may be short lived; and short lived it was.

    The UN investigation – that culminated into the report- accused all sides in the civil war of targeting civilians for murder and rape but said the army and government-allied forces were most to blame for what it described as “one of the most horrendous human rights situations in the world.”

    The report contains harrowing accounts of civilians suspected of supporting the opposition, including children and the disabled, killed by being burned alive, suffocated in containers, shot, hanged from trees or cut to pieces. More than 1,300 rape cases were recorded in just one of South Sudan’s states – the oil-rich Unity state – over a five-month period last year, the report said.

    One woman was quoted telling the UN investigators she had been stripped naked, raped by five soldiers in front of her children on the roadside, then raped again by more men in the bushes only to return and find her children missing.

    “Credible sources,” the UN further said “indicate groups allied to the government are being allowed to rape women in lieu of wages but opposition groups and criminal gangs have also been preying on women and girls. The prevalence of rape suggests its use in the conflict has become an acceptable practice by government SPLA soldiers and affiliated armed militias.”

    Conflict began almost as soon as independence was achieved. The most serious and currently ongoing conflict was sparked by a political dispute between President Salva Kiir, of the ruling Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A), and his former Vice President Riek Machar, after President Kiir dissolved his cabinet and dismissed Mr. Machar. The dispute quickly boiled over into open conflict between forces loyal to each side. It has been exacerbated by long running ethnic tensions, with the largest ethnic group, the Dinkas, mostly siding with President Kiir and the second largest, the Nuer, primarily siding with Mr. Machar.

    Tribal tensions among southern groups plagued the region prior to independence, but Dr. John Garang, then Chairman of SPLM/A, urged unity and emphasized that, “this is a rare opportunity to create greater unity of our people.” This honeymoon period has come to a close following the lengthy transition period and eventual independence of South Sudan.

    President Salva Kiir’s order to Major General Marial Ciennoung, commander of the Presidential Guard (The Tiger Battalion) to disarm the troops also aggravated the tension when Marial allegedly ordered that the Dinka members be re-armed. His deputy – from the Nuer ethnicity – began to question this order and a fight ensued. Kiir blamed Machar for instigating the “coup attempt,” but no evidence has been established. He announced that the “coup” had been put down the next day. Riek Machar denied a coup attempt and instead blamed Kiir for “playing power politics.”

    The conflict has thus left about 1.5 million people internally displaced. 760,000 people have fled to Ethiopia, Kenya, Sudan and Uganda. After the crisis broke out, many families were displaced from their homes and left without food, income, or any means to acquire them.

    2.4 million people are currently severely hungry in the conflict-affected states with an estimated 235,000 children suffering from severe acute malnutrition. More than 55 per cent of the people in South Sudan do not have access to safe water. The country recently faced a cholera outbreak and the crisis is still not over. Food prices are rocketing and local markets are being disrupted by the ongoing conflict.

    What are some of the lessons we can learn from the conflict? We should never idolise a rebellion and assume that the people who are fighting against an injustice will not commit an injustice of their own. For years, the people of South Sudan – under the charismatic leadership of late John Garang – battled the government of Sudan for the grave injustice it meted out on its dark skinned southern citizens. Who would’ve anticipated a situation where those who for over two decades fought against injustice are themselves the perpetrators’ of the same injustice they fought against in the past?

    Another lesson is this: strong leadership matters. Like most Africans who monitored development in the Sudan, I was saddened when Garang died in a helicopter crash months before independence. He was able to hold the people together despite their ethnic differences to fight for a common cause which was why the people voted overwhelmingly in a referendum for independence. I think that what we see in South Sudan is the weakness of civil institutions and a weakness of the political party system unable to deal with and resolve the rivalry of President Kiir and his vice president, Machar. Immature leadership should be partly blamed for the war.

    Not allowing the urgency created by the human cost of conflict to overwhelm the process is another lesson. Conflicts with high human costs can evoke strong interest from the international community, but while well-meaning and potentially helpful, that community also presents potentially conflicting interests that must be carefully managed. There were differences that Garang was able to manage, but his sudden death robbed the process of his unifying abilities. Some of these problems and concerns were merely glossed over.

    Another lesson is to look out for excesses in leadership. The weakness of the parliament in being able to stand up to the usurpation of power by the president and the failure of the army to integrate the various militias, which split apart almost immediately, between them have created some horrific human rights violations. Again, the absence of a unifying leadership is to blame.

    Yet another lesson is to manage the exploitation of natural resources, especially oil. The presence of oil in the conflict-affected states, which provides the primary source of state revenue, has further exacerbated the conflict. Among them is Unity State, a Nuer stronghold, where Mr. Machar’s wife previously challenged incumbent Governor Taban Deng, an ally of President Kiir.

    There may still be hope as some progress has been made toward implementing a peace accord signed in August last year which called for the establishment of a transitional government of national unity. Kiir’s decree giving Machar the newly created post of first vice president is also seen a major step toward resolving the conflict.

    But Machar is waiting for 1,400 of his troops to be settled in the capital, Juba, before making his return to the city. Restoration of trust and assurances of mutual security will be required and necessarily will take time to establish, but it’s a necessary first step.

    However, my concern with the arrangement is that the transitional government will operate without a binding constitution. A permanent constitution – in my opinion – is critical in addressing some of the fundamental institutional weaknesses that led to the war in the first place.

     

     

  • Osinbajo commends progress in South Sudan peace talk

    Osinbajo commends progress in South Sudan peace talk

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Monday commended the progress being recorded in the South Sudan peace talk.

    He made the commendation while signing as a witness to the peace deal brokered between the warring parties in the crisis in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

    According to a statement issued on Tuesday by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Laolu Akande, Osinbajo expressed hope that the conflict in the world’s newest country may come to an end soon.

    The vice president was involved in the diplomatic talks that lasted at least two sessions on Monday in the Ethiopian capital under the auspices of the Inter-Governmental Authority for Development (IGAD) with the addition of a number of other key African countries like Nigeria and international agencies including the African Union, the United Nations and the European Union.

    He said: “I am excited that this might be the end of the mystery that has engulfed South Sudan thus far.”

    Osinbajo, who represented President Muhammadu Buhari at the summit, spoke after a long drawn diplomatic effort that produced an agreement initiated by the President of South Sudan, Salva Kiir Mayardit and fully signed by the leader of the warring faction of the Sudan Peoples’ Liberation Movement (SPLM), Riek Machar, who was a former South Sudan vice president.

    The statement reads: “One of the key leaders of the ruling Sudan Peoples’ Liberation Movement (SPLM), Pagan Amum, signed the peace agreement, representing former political detainees in the South Sudanese conflict.

    “While the South Sudan President is yet to fully sign the agreement, he has promised to conclude consultations on the power-sharing aspect of the agreement and then return to append his full signature very soon, expectedly within weeks.”

    Other aspects of the agreement fully endorsed, according to the statement, included providing access for humanitarian assistance and the cessation of hostilities.

    Speaking with journalists at the end of the meeting, Osinbajo said Nigeria and other stakeholders should be justifiably proud of Monday’s achievement.

  • Photo: Osinbajo in Addis Ababa for peace talks

    Photo: Osinbajo in Addis Ababa for peace talks

    Konare, the VP and Kenya Foreign Minister Ms. Amina Mohamed
    Konare, the VP and Kenya Foreign Minister Ms. Amina Mohamed
     VP wiith Kenya President Uhuru Kenyatta
    VP wiith Kenya President Uhuru Kenyatta
    Vice President Osinbajo signing to witness the event
    Vice President Osinbajo signing to witness the event
    Vice president , South Sudan President Salva Kiir Mayardit  after the signing event on Monday evening in Addis Ababa
    Vice president , South Sudan President Salva Kiir Mayardit after the signing event on Monday evening in Addis Ababa
  • Cholera outbreak kills 18 in South Sudan

    Cholera outbreak kills 18 in South Sudan

    South Sudan Ministry of Health said on Tuesday that no fewer than 18 people have died of Cholera in the country’s Central Equatoria State.

    South Sudanese Health Minister, Riek Gai Kok, said that over 171 cholera cases have been confirmed, declaring an outbreak of the highly contagious infection.

    The first cholera case was reported at a UN Protection of Civilians (POC) base in early June, he said.

    Cholera treatment centers have been established at Juba Hospital and the International Medical Corps clinic at the POC to manage suspected and confirmed cholera cases, he pointed out.

    The disease outbreak adds to the suffering of the South Sudanese people who are already facing tough humanitarian conditions caused by the escalating violence in the newly-established state.

    South Sudan plunged into violence in December 2013 when fighting erupted between troops loyal to President Salva Kiir and defectors led by his former deputy Riek Machar.

    The conflict soon turned into an all-out war with the violence taking on an ethnic dimension that pitted the president’s Dinka tribe against Machar’s Nuer ethnic group.

    The clashes have left thousands of South Sudanese dead and forced around 1.9 million people to flee their homes.