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UN Rights Experts Say International Community Has “Obligation” to Prevent ‘Ethnic Cleansing’ in South Sudan

December 16, 2016(Nyamilepedia) ------ According to new figures released by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), some 1,300 children were recruited by armed forces and armed groups in 2016, bringing the total number of children used in conflict since 2013 to more than 17,000.“Since the first day of this conflict, children have been the ones most devastatingly affected by the violations,” said Leila Gharagozloo-Pakkala, UNICEF’s Regional Director for Eastern and Southern Africa....
L-R: Members of the UN Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan – Kenneth Scott, chairperson Yasmin Sooka and Godfrey Musila – brief the press at the end of a ten-day visit (Photo credit: UNMISS)

December 15, 2016(Nyamilepedia) —– According to Press release extended to Nyamilepedia  “many of the warning signals of impending genocide” are already present in South Sudan amid a “mind boggling” scale of rape of women and girls, a team of United Nations human rights experts said calling on the international community to take immediate action to avert mass bloodshed.

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Speaking as the Team wrapps up a 10-day visit to the crisis-riven South Sudan, Yasmin Sooka, the Chairperson of the UN Commission of Human Rights in South Sudan, said “the state is being set for the repeat of what happened in Rwanda” referring to Rwanda’s 1994 genocide in which over 800, 000 people were killed.

“The stage is being set for a repeat of what happened in Rwanda and the international community is under an obligation to prevent it,” said the Chairperson of the UN Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan, Yasmin Sooka, said in a news release issued by to Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR).

Although the UN Team feared to mention who is preparing grounds for genocides, reports released in New York last by Adama Diang, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Adviser for the Prevention of Genocide, indicate that Salva Kiir government is transporting a huge number of militia into Equatoria and training more militias in President Salva Kiir’s cattle camp in Luri, near Juba.

“There is already a steady process of ethnic cleansing underway in several areas of South Sudan using starvation, gang rape and the burning of villages; everywhere we went across this country we heard villagers saying they are ready to shed blood to get their land back,” she reported, adding that many people the experts met during their visit said “it has already reached a point of no return”

The Human Rights expert, Yasmin, said raping of girls and women by armed groups on both sides is mind boggling.

“The scale of rape of women and girls perpetrated by all armed groups in South Sudan is utterly unacceptable and is frankly mind boggling,” she continued, adding that aid workers told the experts that gang rape is so prevalent that it has become ‘normal.’

The Commission met several displaced women in the Juba camp who were gang raped in July and four months later have yet to receive adequate medical treatment for resulting complications.

In a UN protected camp in Bentiu the Commissioners met a woman who described being gang raped by soldiers just three days earlier when her village was attacked and also heard reports of three women raped that very day by soldiers in army uniform just outside the camp while going to collect firewood.

In Wau, in Western Bahr el Ghazal state, civilians gave graphic accounts of how their husbands and children were robbed and murdered by soldiers from the army during violence in June in which at least 53 people were killed.

The Equatorias, an area of the country that was relatively unaffected by violence, has now become the epicentre of the conflict, according to Commissioner Godfrey Musila, who visited the area.

The picture emerging is one of the presence of armed groups, displacement based on ethnicity, torching of houses, food insecurity and denial of freedom of movement.

The Commission heard numerous accounts of corpses being found along main roads, looming starvation and people fleeing to neighbouring countries on a daily basis.

The Commission states that it is widely believed that fighting will intensify during the dry season, which runs until the end of February. To avert mass bloodshed the UN experts lists a number of steps that the international community should take immediately which include

  • expedite the immediate arrival of the 4,000-strong Regional Protection Force in South Sudan
  • ensure that the force is not restricted only to the capital
  • freezing assets
  • enacting targeted sanctions
  • and implement an arms embargo.

“It is also urgent to set up the hybrid court promised for South Sudan,” said Commissioner, Ken Scott.

Scott stresses that South Sudan has no functioning courts even the traditional ones are no longer functioning.

“Large parts of the country literally have no functioning courts and even the traditional reconciliation methods are now breaking down with the result that it’s a free for all.” Scotts said.

“As the UN Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide said, many of the warning signals of impending genocide are already there – an existing conflict, resort to polarized ethnic identities, dehumanization, a culture of denial, displacement based on ethnicity and in some places indications of systematic violations and planning – but the important thing is there is still time to prevent it,” said Ms Sooka.

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1 comment

Lakueijik Dut December 16, 2016 at 3:14 am

UN is the one fueling this conflict in South Sudan.

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