Brutal Fighting in South Sudan
ADDIS ABABA – International News – Fighting in South Sudan continues. Today, rebel forces claim that they have recaptured the town of Malakal. This report comes via a spokesman for former South Sudanese Vice President Riek Machar. The news was shared at peace talks in Ethiopia. Those talks which are aimed at ending the violence in South Sudan have been moving very slowly.
“I have just received confirmation from our field commander that the SPLM/SPLA forces under the direct command of Major-General Gathoth Gathkuoth have recaptured the strategic town of Malakal, the capital of oil-rich Upper Nile state,” stated Brigadier-General Lul Ruai Koang, who is the military spokesperson for the former vice president.
“Our forces are still pursuing Salva Kiir’s forces,” according to the Major General speaking in Addis Ababa, where the two sides have been engaged for the past four weeks in peace talks.
Fighting has been raging in and around Malakal since Sunday.
There has been as escalation in deaths due to the fighting. Two hundred people were killed including government troops when a crowded boat sank as it carried refugees who were fleeing the fighting across the White Nile River.
The General reported, “Government forces were chased, some towards Akoka. Our forces are still pursuing them. Some of them crossed the river. So the people who are said to have drowned in the river, I am sure some of them are government forces”.
United Nations Reports Refugee Numbers Growing
The number of South Sudanese civilians driven from their homes by a month-long conflict has surpassed 400,000 in a major surge over the past week, with those fleeing to neighbouring countries nearly doubling to 78,000, according to United Nations figures released today.
The new estimate came as the UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) reported heavy fighting between pro- and anti-Government forces in Malakal, Upper Nile state, since early this morning near a UN base, with combatants using heavy machine guns and tanks and stray bullets landing inside the base, wounding dozens of internally displaced persons (IDPs).
“With fighting still being reported in parts of South Sudan, mainly in the states of Jonglei and Upper Nile, and the slow progress in the political talks in Addis Ababa, we are anticipating further displacement both within and beyond the borders of South Sudan,” UN refugee agency (UNHCR) spokesperson Adrian Edwards told reporters in Geneva in an update on the conflict that erupted between President Salva Kiir’s forces and those of former deputy president Riek Machar on 15 December.
The fighting has continued even as political talks with the parties in the Ethiopian capital seek to establish a ceasefire.
IDPs now number 355,000, up from 200,000 last week, with the added displacement fuelled by both the fighting itself and the fear of it, combined with deteriorating living conditions, including a lack of food in some markets, he said. Some 65,000 IDPs have sought refuge in UN bases across the country.
In its report on the fighting in Malakal, UNMISS said it is treating dozens of wounded at its hospital there, and called on all the parties to respect the integrity of UN installations. Due to today’s fighting the number of IDPs seeking refuge at the UN base there has nearly doubled to 20,000, protected by some 1,000 UN peacekeepers, including 110 newly-arrived police ordered in by the Security Council as part of 5,500-strong reinforcements for UNMISS.
Of South Sudanese fleeing across the borders, more than half have headed for Uganda’s West Nile region. “In all, 42,654 mostly women and children, from Nimule in South Sudan, are now in the Ugandan districts of Arua, Adjumani and Kiryandongo,” Mr. Edwards said, noting that many men are taking their families to the Ugandan border and leaving them there before returning back to their country.
“From the refugees we have spoken to we are hearing eye-witness accounts of killings, houses being burnt and shooting,” he added, citing one woman, 65-year-old Adau from the town of Bor as saying she had seen people being shot.
“Houses were burning and people were being killed . . . from morning till evening people were shooting,” she told UNHCR staff at the Dzaipi transit centre, originally designed to host only 400 people but now sheltering more than 32,500, most of them sleeping in the open with their children. They complain of cold at night. “Here life is too hard,” said Adau, who was staying in a communal shelter with 9 family members.
“As well as shelter, they need clean water, food, and basic household goods,” Mr. Edwards said. “As more people continue to arrive daily at Dzaipi we are working with the Ugandan authorities to set up additional camps.”
Ethiopia is also seeing an upsurge, with more than 18,600 people crossing into the Akobo area from Jonglei, and UNHCR is beefing up its staff to better help them. Nearly 6,800 people have from Jonglei have fled to Kenya, many of them children.
In Sudan, available estimates are that 10,000 have crossed into West and South Kordofan, two states that are themselves volatile. “The majority are nomads and, so far, we have not been able to verify exact numbers due to lack of access,” Mr. Edwards noted.