海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Civilians in South Sudan increasingly vulnerable as violence reaches UN compound

An attack on the UN compound in Akobo, South Sudan, killed two Indian peacekeepers and prompted the UN to send helicopters to evacuate staff.

By Sara Miller Llana, Staff writer
Paris
  • A daily update on terrorism and security issues.

Stability in South Sudan in the wake of an alleged coup has rapidly deteriorated, with the United Nations confirming Friday that two of its peacekeepers were killed after an attack on a UN base.

The attack on the UN compound happened in the town of Akobo, in Jonglei state, and prompted the group to send four helicopters to rescue staff.聽The assault underscored the vulnerability of South Sudan's larger population, as more than聽20,000 civilians have fled to UN compounds across the country, reports Bloomberg.聽In the past week, up to 500 people have been killed, and the South Sudanese government had to cede control of the town of Bor, the capital of Jonglei, to rebels loyal to former Vice President Riek Marchar.

President Salva Kiir has accused Mr. Machar, a rival who was fired from his job in July, of staging a coup.聽聽Ethnic violence has been a particular concern:聽President Kiir is a member of the Dinka ethnic group; Marchar, who is being hunted by security forces, is from the Nuer ethnic group.

US President Barack Obama said the country 鈥渟tands at the precipice," and deployed 45 troops to help quell the fighting that erupted this week in the capital, Juba.聽The US and Britain began聽evacuating their citizens聽because of the growing instability.聽

UN head Ban Ki-moon has called for urgent political dialogue, and Reuters reported that Kiir has said he is willing to participate.聽Regional mediators, who helped in the aftermath of Sudan's civil war, were set to meet with Kiir on Friday, the same time the UN Security Council is holding聽emergency talks.

But Machar, in an exclusive interview with Radio France International, called the president a 鈥渄ictator who is tearing the country apart."聽

Some 2 million people died in a civil war in Sudan between 1983 and 2005. The peace that followed gave rise to South Sudan, which became the world's newest nation in 2011. President Obama said the recent fighting 鈥渢hreatens to plunge South Sudan back into the dark days of its past.鈥

According to Bloomberg News, South Sudan has sub-Saharan Africa鈥檚 third-largest oil reserves after Nigeria and Angola, citing the BP Statistical Review. While the flow of oil has not yet been affected, fighting has spread to crude-producing areas, Sudanese Information Minister Ahmed Bilal Osman told the news agency by phone from Khartoum, Sudan鈥檚 capital.