UN special adviser condemns Kiir over commitment to end violence

Adama Deng (left), the United Nations' Special Advisor for the Prevention of Genocide, Navi Pillay, its High Commissioner for Human Rights, in South Sudan on April 29, 2014. PHOTO | ISAAC ALEBE AYORO | UNMISS

What you need to know:

  • Mr Dieng said the peace process has yet to be accompanied by a complete cessation of hostilities, undermining the likelihood that the national dialogue proposed by the government will be seen as credible.

  • More than 52,000 South Sudanese are reported to have fled to Uganda in January alone, from towns in the southwest region including Yei, Morobo, Lainya and Kajo-Keji.

JUBA, Thursday

The United Nations Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide, Adama Dieng, has condemned South Sudanese President Salva Kiir for what he says is his lack of commitment to end violence in the war-torn country.

Mr Dieng said the peace process has yet to be accompanied by a complete cessation of hostilities, undermining the likelihood that the national dialogue proposed by the government will be seen as credible.

“President Salva Kiir has made a commitment to end the violence and bring about peace, yet we still see ongoing clashes, and the risk that mass atrocities will be committed remains ever-present,” Mr Dieng said.

More than 52,000 South Sudanese are reported to have fled to Uganda in January alone, from towns in the southwest region including Yei, Morobo, Lainya and Kajo-Keji.

The UN said about 24,000 people arrived in Uganda between January 25 and 31, of which 4,500 were received on a single day, January 28.

The displaced gave accounts of civilian killings, destruction of homes, sexual violence, and looting of livestock and property, and cited fear of arrest and torture, Mr Dieng said.

He said the UN was particularly alarmed at the situation in Kajo-Keji in Central Equatoria, south of Juba, where civilians have fled over fear of violence en masse. “The access of the United Nations peacekeeping mission to and around Kajo-Keji has reportedly been restricted despite the serious security situation, as peacekeepers were initially blocked from accessing the area,” Mr Dieng said.

DEEP CONCERNS

During the African Union Summit in Ethiopia, the continental bloc, the Intergovernmental Authority on Development, and the United Nations in a joint statement expressed their deep concerns over the continuing spread of fighting and risk of inter-communal violence escalating into mass atrocities in South Sudan.

“If South Sudan is to achieve peace,” Mr Dieng said, “all belligerents must urgently cease hostilities and invest in the peace process to settle their differences, before the territorial fragmentation and destruction of the social fabric of this young country become irreversible.”

Meanwhile, South Sudan said today it would seek $200 million from the international community to finance its fiscal budget for 2016-2017 that is estimated to be $400 million.

Finance Minister Stephen Dhieu Dau told reporters in Juba that the cash was urgently needed to implement key reforms enshrined in the signed peace agreement to end more than three years of violent conflict in the oil-rich and yet impoverished nation.

Additional reporting by Xinhua.