UN rushes reinforcements to troubled South Sudan

December 27, 2013 12:34 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 06:07 pm IST - United Nations

In this photo released by the Kenyan Presidential Press Service, President Uhuru Kenyatta and Ethiopian Premier Hailemariam Dessalegn, right, sitting, talk to some of the South Sudanese detainees after they visited them in Juba, South Sudan on Thursday.

In this photo released by the Kenyan Presidential Press Service, President Uhuru Kenyatta and Ethiopian Premier Hailemariam Dessalegn, right, sitting, talk to some of the South Sudanese detainees after they visited them in Juba, South Sudan on Thursday.

The United Nations has expressed hope that reinforcements including troops and critical assets such as helicopters will reach strife-torn South Sudan within the next two days, as it seeks to protect civilians in a conflict which has killed over 1,000 people.

“We are in desperate need for improved capacity and strength to be able to implement the mandate (to protect civilians) in a much more proactive way,” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s Special Representative Hilde Johnson told a video news conference from Juba, South Sudan’s capital.

She noted that over 50,000 civilians have already sought refuge at U.N. bases and stressed the need for “unprecedented speed” to bring in additional troops and helicopters.

“But let me underline: all peacekeepers are under the instruction to use force when civilians are under imminent threat.”

The Security Council had two days ago authorized almost doubling the U.N. Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) to nearly 14,000 personnel through the transfer of units if necessary from other U.N. forces in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Darfur, Abyei, Cd’Ivoire and Liberia.

The UNSC action came days after two Indian peacekeepers were killed and one wounded when 2000 rebel Lou Nuer youths attacked a UNMISS base manned by only 43 Indian soldiers and giving refuge to South Sudanese civilians.

Tensions within South Sudan, the world’s youngest country which only gained independence in 2011, after seceding from Sudan, burst out into open conflict on December 15, when President Salva Kiir’s government said soldiers loyal to former Deputy-President Riek Machar, dismissed in July, launched an attempted coup.

Mr. Kiir belongs to the Dinka ethnic group and Mr. Machar to the Lou Nuer. The conflict has been increasingly marked by reports of ethnically targeted violence.

“We are working round the clock to get assets in that can assist us in the current crisis as quickly as ever possible. We’re working on 48-hour delivery of several of the critical assets that we need,” Ms. Johnson said, adding that such assets include both troops and critical assets such as helicopters.

She said UNMISS is investigating reports of extra- judicial killings, arbitrary detentions, mistreatment, abuses and mass rapes, stressing that it is essential that all perpetrators be held accountable.

“We are expecting action to follow,” she added, welcoming Mr. Kiir’s order two days ago for the arrest of anyone involved in atrocities and for them to be held accountable.

Ms. Johnson noted that UNMISS had been unable to verify reports of a massacre and of a mass grave being found in Bentiu in the north with 75 bodies, but that in any case the number had been exaggerated from between 30 and 50.

“I call upon the political leaders of South Sudan to order their forces to lay down their arms and to give peace a chance and to do so urgently,” she said, recalling the decades of violent struggle that have marked South Sudan’s march to independence and stressing that its ethnic diversity should be a source of strength and unity, not of discord.

“These past 11 days have been a very trying time for South Sudan and for all citizens of this new-born nation,” she added.

“What happened this last week has for many of them brought back the nightmares of the past. The nation that was painstakingly built over decades of conflict and strife was at stake. And for us one of the most important things is to have those nightmares end.”

Despite the challenges, she said UNMISS is “maintaining and increasing our footprint across the country,” moving available assets to the most volatile areas.

“At this point in time the military is overstretched with current protection obligations related to the civilians in our camps and making sure they are safe,” she noted.

“We are also doing some patrols now by day and night in the neighbourhoods in Juba to try to create a more protective environment to people so that they can return to their homes.”

Johnson also said that fighting was currently going on in Bor, capital of Jonglei state north of Juba, where government forces control the airport and key crossroads, and added that the Mission fully supports the efforts of President Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya and Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn who visited Juba in a bid to broker a peace.

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