Brehs, South Sudan is taking a turn for the worse.....

2Quik4UHoes

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South Sudan conflict: Bentiu 'ethnic slaughter' condemned
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The army was forced out of Bentiu last week
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South Sudan strife
Hundreds of people were killed because of their ethnicity after South Sudan rebels seized the oil hub of Bentiu last week, the UN has said.

They were targeted at a mosque, a church and a hospital, the UN Mission in South Sudan said in a statement.

It added that hate speech was broadcast on local radio stations, saying certain groups should leave the town and urging men to rape women.

The Nuer community are seen as supporters of rebel leader Riek Machar.

President Salva Kiir is a member of the country's largest group, the Dinka.

Although both men have prominent supporters from various communities, there have been numerous reports of rebels killing ethnic Dinkas and the army targeting Nuers since the conflict broke out in December 2013.

Since then, more than a million people have fled their homes in what was already among the world's poorest nations.

'Piles of bodies'
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Analysis
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James CopnallSouth Sudan analyst
In a civil war marked by numerous human rights abuses, the reports from Bentiu are among the most shocking.

The rebels are accused of killing Dinkas (President Kiir's ethnic group), Sudanese (because of the alleged support of Darfuri rebel groups for President Kiir) and Nuers who were not overtly cheering their fellow Nuer rebels.

The victims hid in hospitals and places of worship, but did not find sanctuary there.

Many of the rebels say they took up arms because of the murder of their relatives in Juba at the beginning of this conflict.

Both sides have committed terrible abuses.

However the scale of the killings carried out by rebel troops, including the feared White Army militia, in Bentiu, Bor and Malakal, has turned many people against the rebel leader, Riek Machar.

With the rainy season approaching, and negotiations set to resume in Addis Ababa, there is likely to be more fighting - and very likely more atrocities - in the next few weeks.

South Sudan analyst James Copnall says that in a civil war marked by numerous human rights abuses, the reports from Bentiu are among the most shocking.

Non-Nuer South Sudanese and foreign nationals were singled out and killed, the UN Mission in South Sudan (Unmiss) said.

Some 200 civilians were reportedly killed at the Kali-Ballee mosque where they had sought shelter.

At the hospital, Nuer men, women and children, who hid rather than cheer the rebel forces as they entered the town, were also killed, it said.

The UN's top humanitarian official in South Sudan, Toby Lanzer, was in Bentiu on Sunday and Monday.

He told the BBC's Focus on Africa programme that the scenes in Bentiu were "perhaps [the] most shocking set of circumstances" he had ever faced.

He said he saw "piles of [the bodies of] people who had been slaughtered" last week, adding that they all appeared to be civilians.

Many of those killed were Sudanese traders, especially from Darfur, Mr Lanzer said.

Analyst James Copnall says they could have been targeted because rebel groups in Darfur are alleged to back President Kiir against the rebels.

One rebel source said many of those killed in the mosque were actually soldiers who had taken off their uniforms.

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Video footage from the UN shows bodies lying in the streets of Bantiu
The situation in South Sudan is "in a downward spiral", Mr Lanzer said, describing the stakes as "very, very high".

There are now more than 22,000 people seeking refuge at the UN peacekeeping base over the border in Sudan, he said, including families from the majority community in the state.

"When I asked them why [they were seeking refuge] they said: 'When the violence has such a cycle of revenge you can't tell what will come next'," Mr Lanzer said.

He added that the UN base was not built for such large numbers, and that there was currently only one litre of drinking water for each of the 22,000 civilians in the base, and one latrine for every 350 people.

Upsurge in fighting
Bentiu, capital of the oil-rich Unity State, has changed hands several times during the conflict.

Control of the oilfields is crucial because South Sudan gets about 90% of its revenue from oil.

A ceasefire was signed in January but there has been a recent upsurge in fighting.

Last week, the UN said an attack on one of its bases in the central town of Bor in which at least 58 people were killed could constitute a war crime.

Fighting broke out last year after Mr Kiir accused Mr Machar of plotting to stage a coup.

Mr Machar, who was sacked as vice-president last year, denied the charges but launched a rebellion.

The UN has about 8,500 peacekeepers in South Sudan, which became the world newest state after seceding from Sudan in 2011.
 

2Quik4UHoes

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South Sudan: Rebels Say On 'Rescue Mission' to Bor
22 APRIL 2014
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Photo: Tim McKulka/UN Photo
Soldiers of the Sudanese People's Liberation Army (SPLA) .
Addis Ababa — South Sudanese rebels loyal to the former vice president, Riek Machar, said their forces were on a rescue mission to Bor town, the capital of Jonglei state which was the scene of the recent massacre of women and children from the Nuer ethnic group at a United Nations base.

The rebels' military spokesperson, Brig Gen Lul Ruach Koang, revealed that the opposition forces under the command of Gen Simon Gatwech Dual were moving with high speed towards Bor town, and have already overrun and captured many towns, including the administrative headquarters of Duk county, north of Bor.

"SPLA/SPLM forces under overall command of Maj. Gen. Simon Gatwech Dual this morning [Tuesday] liberated Mareng, administrative headquarters of Duk county, along with several government military outposts of Pajut, Duk Deng, Patuo-Noy and Poktap," said Koang in a statement extended to Sudan Tribune on Tuesday.

He said the government forces were retreating towards Twic East county as the combined "regular forces and volunteer fighters" were conducting the joint operations.

"The combined forces are moving with lightening speed in order to go and rescue survivors of Bor Massacre of last week," he asserted.

Over 20 government soldiers were injured and unknown numbers killed in the Patuenoi area of Duk, the county commissioner, Elijah Monchnom Wuor, said Monday.

"The fighting broke out at between 5am and 6am when rebels attacked the South Sudanese army's positions in Duk Payuel, Patuenoi and Mareng," Wuor said.

"Our soldiers defeated the rebels in the first, second and third rounds, before they withdrew at Patuenoi. The same happened in Mareng, which is the headquarters of Duk County. We were expecting to see the commanders who were commanding these forces, but they had not reached us here in Panyagoor," he added.

The clash took place around 200 kilometers from Bor, the Jonglei capital.

Rebel forces also say they receive reports that government troops were being airlifted from Paloich oilfields to Warrap state to defend the area in anticipation of imminent attack.

The rebels further claimed that they repulsed an attack by the government forces at Dome area as they attempted to penetrate through Ulang county, east of the state capital, Malakal, in Upper Nile state.

REBELS DOWNPLAY UPDF THREAT TO DEFEND BOR

Meanwhile, the spokesperson for the Ugandan People's Defence Forces (UPDF), Col. Paddy Ankunda, on Tuesday reportedly warned the rebels not to attack Bor, saying the Ugandan troops were "well prepared" and ready to defend the town.

The rebels however downplayed the warning, saying their fighters were ready to face the "foreign aggressors," accusing the government of organising the attack in the name of youth.

Machar's spokesperson, James Gatdet Dak, said Juba provoked the opposition with the "barbaric massacre of civilians in Bor" leaving the rebels with no other option but to "defend themselves and save the civilians who are at risk of further genocide."

"This rescue mission to Bor town is necessitated by the recent barbaric massacre of hundreds of innocent women and children from the Nuer ethnic group. This brutal killing was carried out by members of the army and police in disguise," he told Sudan Tribune Tuesday.

If such innocent civilians could be "helplessly butchered in the watchful eyes of the United Nations in a state capital," he added, "it means the regime in Juba was doing even worse in remote areas."

He lamented that the Bor incident had brought back painful memories about a similar incident in Juba in which he said soldiers loyal to President Salva Kiir allegedly massacred thousands of civilians from the Nuer ethnic group in the nation's capital when violence erupted in mid-December last year.

The rebels captured Bor twice in the past before they were dislodged by a joint force of government troops and the UPDF. Bor is about 200km north of the capital, Juba.

Fighting is intensifying as government and rebels engage forces in multiple fronts despite the cessation of hostilities agreement.

South Sudan army spokesperson confirmed on Tuesday that heavy fighting occurred in the eastern state of Jonglei, but said rebels were repulsed by government forces.

"Scores of rebel fighters were killed", Phillip Aguer told Sudan Tribune by phone.
 

Kritic

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if america dont let us fukkin help this time..

its gonna be another rwandan genocide..
it probably is already a rwandan genocide.

clinton said the one thing he regrets in his presidency is how he handled the rwandan situation. but he also said even in his 8 yr term, things went on too fast for him. barack is in the same situation as him. the powers using the cia are busy fuqqin sh1t up and directing them the wrong direction.
 

Trajan

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It saddens me whenever people kill their own people. Where the fukk are all the systems put in place to help when situations like this occur? :wow:


Are they really ''their own people'' tho?

Primary loyalty in Africa is to tribe. It's fukk everyone else.

They do not really have a concept of the nation state.
 

joeychizzle

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Are they really ''their own people'' tho?

Primary loyalty in Africa is to tribe. It's fukk everyone else.

They do not really have a concept of the nation state.

Well then, it's still a damn shame to kill your neighbours.
 

Sinnerman

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I've been trying to follow this as well... ffs I vaguely remeber a thread/article on sudan a few months ago in which the two sides came to some sort of an agreement? or was that another nation
 

2Quik4UHoes

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Are they really ''their own people'' tho?

Primary loyalty in Africa is to tribe. It's fukk everyone else.

They do not really have a concept of the nation state.

Well then it begs the question of what brought the tribal tensions to this point. Remember these two groups also fought together against the north and became a new nation together.
I've been trying to follow this as well... ffs I vaguely remeber a thread/article on sudan a few months ago in which the two sides came to some sort of an agreement? or was that another nation

They had a ceasefire but that shyt is basically being disregarded.

new country, unresolved tribal conflict, rich resources = deadly equation.

It's that famine that's gonna be a problem. Some say it might be worse than Ethiopia in the 80s.
 

Trajan

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Well then it begs the question of what brought the tribal tensions to this point. Remember these two groups also fought together against the north and became a new nation together.

That's precisely it. It's the common enemy (Sudan) that gave them focus. Now with them out of the picture, it's back to our regularly scheduled programming of tribal warfare.

Now it's a fight for supremacy. It's not like we haven't seen this before in Africa.


It's that famine that's gonna be a problem. Some say it might be worse than Ethiopia in the 80s.

Which is crazy considering how fertile their land is :why:

More than 90 percent of South Sudan's land is arable, with the potential to become the breadbasket of Africa and the Middle East. But only four percent of the land is cultivated today, and South Sudan continues to rely on agricultural imports from Uganda and Kenya.


But then this explains it

Finding qualified workers is also proving difficult with an estimated 80 percent of South Sudan's population illiterate.

Be dumb Africans brehs
 
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