South Sudan: UN calls for end to violence as planned peace talks progress
Jan 2, 2014: Amid set peace talks between the Government of South Sudan and warring
rebels, the head of the United Nations peacekeeping mission in the country today urged
both sides to make crucial efforts to end the violence.
“We call for both parties
to use this first day of the new year to take a decisive step for peace,” the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General, Hilde Johnson, told journalists in the South
Sudanese capital, Juba. “We want to make this day, the day that the fighting stopped.”
Representatives
of President Salva Kiir and former deputy president Riek Machar were due to meet on
Wednesday in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa, according to the Intergovernmental
Authority on Development (IGAD), the East African bloc that is mediating the talks.
Cessation of hostilities, opening humanitarian corridors, the issue of political prisoners,
and protection of civilians will form the main agenda of the talks. “It is a step
in the right direction,” said Ms. Johnson, who also heads the UN Mission in South
Sudan (UNMISS).
She added that negotiations in Addis need to be accompanied
by a deeper process that focuses on national reconciliation, and reconciliation between
the communities which have not healed since South Sudan won independence from Sudan
in 2011 after decades of civil war. “The country is at a crossroads. It's at the fork
in the road,” Ms. Johnson said. “But it can still be saved from further major escalations
of violence. It is up to the leaders of this country and the two parties.”
Fresh
fighting in the world's newest country erupted on 15 December when President Kiir
said soldiers loyal to Mr. Machar, dismissed from office in July, launched an attempted
coup. Mr. Kiir belongs to the Dinka ethnic group and Mr. Machar to the Lou Nuer, and
the conflict has been increasingly marked by reports of ethnically targeted violence.
Thousands
of people are estimated to have died in the violence and some 180,000 others have
been driven from their homes, up to 75,000 of them seeking refuge on UNMISS bases,
which has been authorized by the Security Council to almost double its armed strength
to nearly 14,000 in an effort to protect civilians. “We need to do everything to prevent
such a cycle of violence between the communities in South Sudan,” Ms. Johnson said,
stressing that those responsible need to be held to account. “I condemn in the strongest
possible terms the atrocities committed against innocent civilians of different communities
by elements from both sides,” she added.
The UN Mission yesterday voiced grave
concern over mounting evidence of gross human rights abuses in the strife-torn country,
including extra-judicial killings of civilians and captured soldiers, massive displacements
and arbitrary detentions, often with ethnic undertones. UNMISS cited the discovery
of large numbers of bodies in Juba, the capital, and the Upper Nile and Jonglei state
capitals of Malakal and Bor. The UN has been collecting information every day since
the crisis began and pledged to continue to investigate all reports of serious human
rights violations, and to collect evidence and eyewitness testimony in order to document
such allegations.
It reminded all parties of their obligation to protect civilians
and act in accordance with human rights and humanitarian law, and called on key leaders
to send strong public messages to their respective constituencies insisting that the
violence must stop, and that anyone disobeying these orders will be punished severely.
Ms. Johnson welcomed the African Union's Peace and Security Council's decision to
establish a commission to investigate human rights violations and other abuses and
recommend ways and means to ensure accountability, reconciliation and healing among
all communities.
Meanwhile, UN agencies and humanitarian partners, supported
by UN blue helmets working to protect camps, are working to provide families with
water, shelter, food and other emergency relief. Aid agencies will need $166 million
to respond to immediate needs until March, Ms. Johnson reminded the international
community calling on donors to come forward and assist.