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Thread: Tensions rise in South Sudan

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    Angry

    Granny says, "Stay inna camp - don't go outside where soldiers'll rape ya...

    Hunger, fear plague South Sudan camps
    Sat, Aug 06, 2016 - DEVASTATING SCALE: The civil war that ended on paper months ago is not over for thousands of women who risk sexual assault by soldiers if they leave UN camps
    At a sprawling displacement camp on the outskirts of the South Sudanese capital, women have faced a wrenching choice: risk starvation or sexual assault. When her family ran out of food last month, Angelina Nhokmar, a 20-year-old mother of two, ventured outside the camp’s gates. She said she was lucky to have made it to the market and back unharmed, because dozens of women were raped by government soldiers in recent weeks as they made the same journey. “It’s not safe,” she said, tossing handfuls of sorghum into a pot of boiling water. “Our enemies are outside.” The civil war that ripped apart South Sudan, the world’s youngest country, ended on paper months ago, but an eruption of clashes between the nation’s rival factions last month put a chokehold on regular food distribution for the tens of thousands of people stranded in UN-run displacement camps. As families struggled to find sustenance, they endured an increase in healthcare crises, ethnic tensions and sexual violence.

    Nearly 30,000 people have been sheltering at UN sites around the capital, Juba, since South Sudan erupted into civil war in 2013. For more than two years, soldiers loyal to South Sudanese President Salva Kiir — who belongs to the Dinka ethnic group, South Sudan’s largest — battled troops led by Riek Machar of the Nuer ethnic group, which is believed to be the second largest. Tens of thousands of people lost their lives in the war, and troops on both sides committed human rights abuses against civilians on a devastating scale. A peace deal officially ended the fighting last year. Machar, who had served as vice president before being fired in 2013, agreed to become Kiir’s deputy again and moved back to Juba in April.

    Fighting broke out again between the two sides on July 7, killing hundreds. Machar’s residence was destroyed and he fled the capital. He has refused to return to Juba unless more international troops are deployed. Kiir opposes this, arguing that the 12,000 UN peacekeeping troops already stationed there are enough. For years, the displacement camps have been worlds unto themselves: communities complete with churches, shops and schools. They are also plagued by overcrowding, recurring shortages of basic goods and the uncertainty faced by residents, who have no idea when, if ever, they will feel safe enough to leave. So they stay, cloistered inside barbed-wire fences guarded by UN troops who have failed to keep peace in the capital or even to prevent assaults just outside the camps’ perimeters.

    Sexual assaults in Juba surged last month to at least 217 reported cases, UN Human Rights High Commissioner Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein said in a statement on Thursday. Members of South Sudan’s national army seemed to be responsible for most of the assaults, he said, adding that most of those attacked were displaced Nuer women and girls. Many were women living in the camps who ventured out to the markets when food ran out. Others were fleeing the clashes and making their way to the displacement sites for the first time. The civilians who came to these camps in 2013 were overwhelmingly Nuer. Last week, thousands of them demonstrated against Kiir for recognizing a new vice president to take Machar’s place, calling it a violation of the peace deal. Such a gathering would be unimaginable now in central Juba.

    MORE http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/worl.../06/2003652570

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    The place is falling apart yet the liberal hawks are silent. Odd- they only care about humanitarian stuff. I guess except in deep dark Africa. The Neocons are silent- because there is no oil there.

    The real answer, is the US has no vital national security interest to be interested in the region.
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    600% inflation in So. Sudan...

    South Sudan inflation surges to more than 600 percent in wake of conflict
    Tuesday 9th August, 2016: South Sudan's inflation more than doubled in July to reach an annual rate of 661.3 percent, its statistics office said on Monday, as the economy of the 5-year old nation continued to reel amid civil conflict.
    The National Bureau of Statistics said in a statement that inflation jumped from 309.6 percent a month earlier due to rising food and non-alcoholic drinks prices. Prices rose 77.7 percent month-on-month in July.

    Oil-producing South Sudan won independence from Sudan in 2011 but in December 2013 slid into a two-year civil war after a dispute between President Salva Kiir and his former deputy Riek Machar. The economy has been battered, driving prices higher.

    In June, U.N. agencies said up to 4.8 million people in South Sudan face severe food shortages, the highest level since a conflict began. For more details, click on:http://www.ssnbs.org/cpi/2016/8/8/co...july-2016.html

    http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/...r/3025956.html

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    Clinton will beat those numbers once she is in in charge.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Peter1469 View Post
    The place is falling apart yet the liberal hawks are silent. Odd- they only care about humanitarian stuff. I guess except in deep dark Africa. The Neocons are silent- because there is no oil there.

    The real answer, is the US has no vital national security interest to be interested in the region.
    Why are realism disciples silent then?

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    Word on the grapevine is Machar is hiring. He ain't gonna get nobody worth a crap for whats being offered though.
    People who think a movie about plastic dolls is trying to turn their kids gay or trans are now officially known as

    Barbie Q’s

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    Quote Originally Posted by Ransom View Post
    Why are realism disciples silent then?
    Because we have zero interest in the region.
    ΜOΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ


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    Quote Originally Posted by Peter1469 View Post
    Because we have zero interest in the region.
    We know Khartoum hosted Bin Laden during the 90's but I don't disagree. Although we need to keep a sharp eye, the Arab League and African coalitions need to step up.

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    Unhappy

    South Sudan civil war refugees reach one million mark...

    South Sudan refugees reach one million mark
    Fri, 16 Sep 2016 - The number of people who have fled South Sudan because of the country's civil war has passed the one million mark, the UN refugee agency says.
    Fighting that broke out in the capital, Juba, in July is responsible for the latest surge in those fleeing, it says. More than 1.6 million people are also displaced within South Sudan, meaning about 20% of the population have been made homeless since December 2013. A fragile peace deal signed last year is on the brink of collapse. "The violence in July came as a major setback to peace efforts in South Sudan," the UNHCR spokesman Leo Dobbs said in a statement.

    The UN says more than 185,000 people have fled South Sudan since July. "The fighting has shattered hopes for a real breakthrough and triggered new waves of displacement and suffering, while humanitarian organisations are finding it very difficult for logistical, security and funding reasons to provide urgent protection and assistance to the hundreds of thousands in need," Mr Dobbs said.


    A woman from South Sudan holds a child on her knees as she sits inside a make-shift camp at Nimule border, in Amuru Distric in Uganda

    South Sudan refugees:

    * Uganda: 373,626 - more than a third of these have arrived since July; 20,000 over last week. New arrivals report fighting in south, attacks on civilians by armed groups, who loot, sexually assault women and girls and recruit boys
    * Ethiopia: 292,000 - 11,000 crossed into Gambella over the past week. New arrivals are from the Nuer group, including 500 children travelling alone, fearing renewed conflict after seeing troop movements
    * Sudan: 247,317 - 1,800 arriving each month in White Nile state, floods preventing others
    Kenya: 90,000 - 300 a week fleeing insecurity, economic instability and drought
    * DR Congo: 40,000 - current influx to Ituri province.

    Many of the refugees arriving in Uganda, which hosts the most South Sudanese, are "exhausted after days walking in the bush and going without food or water. Many children have lost one or both of their parents", the UNHCR says. A fall-out between President Salva Kiir and former Vice-President Machar - the most powerful members of their respective Dinka and Nuer ethnic groups - led to the civil war which erupted in December 2013. They only agreed to settle their differences under intense international pressure, signing a peace deal in August 2015 - and Mr Machar returned to Juba as vice-president in a unity government in April. But battles then broke out between his bodyguards and presidential guards three months later, prompting him to flee.

    Another member of his party has been appointed as vice-president, a move Mr Machar does not recognise. Earlier this week, a report funded by George Clooney accused both Mr Kiir and Mr Machar, as well as their officials, of personally profiting from the war. Both men have denied the allegations. The UN wants to deploy a 4,000-strong regional protection force for Juba which would have a more robust mandate than the 12,000 UN soldiers already in the country, however the mandate and size of the force still have to be agreed.

    More on South Sudan's crisis:

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    Quote Originally Posted by Peter1469 View Post
    It looks like some American military members were wounded when the aircraft they were flying in took enemy fire. They were on a mission to evacuate US citizens. Many other governments are evacuating their embassies from South Sudan.

    IF that storey is true I'm all for them evacuating our folks and telling them to NEVER go the $#@! back or they are on their own.
    On the other hand it's also the only explaination of us being there that the public would tolerate. Excuse me but given our governments propensity to lie to us, don't know if I'm buying the explanation

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