The Borneo Post

South Sudan court finds 10 soldiers guilty of raping aid workers, murder

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JUBA: A South Sudan military court yesterday found 10 soldiers guilty of raping five foreign aid workers and murdering a local journalist during fighting in Juba in July 2016.

“The military court has found out that the accused ... are guilty for their direct responsibi­lities in committing these crimes,” ruled Judge Knight Baryano Almas, detailing charges of rape, murder, looting and destructio­n.

One accused was acquitted while another, a military commander accused of overseeing the chilling attack, died in prison last October in what the army said was a ‘natural death’.

Violence erupted in South Sudan’s capital when a peace deal between President Salva Kiir and his former deputy Riek Machar collapsed in July 2016.

During the clashes, government forces attacked the Terrain hotel compound housing some 50 employees of foreign organisati­ons.

In his evidence at the start of the trial, the hotel’s British owner, Mike Woodward, said that ‘50 to 100 armed soldiers’ broke into the compound.

“One group proceeded straight to the bar and restaurant while another group continued to the residentia­l area,” he said.

Woodward listed ‘ the gang rape of at least five internatio­nal women’, the murder of a South Sudanese journalist, the shooting of a US aid worker and ‘the beating and torture of almost every person in the entire building’, including mock executions, among the crimes allegedly committed at his hotel.

Woodward’s testimony is supported by reports compiled by the UN and Human Rights Watch.

During the attack the aid workers made multiple appeals for help to nearly UN peacekeepe­rs, which went unanswered.

A special UN investigat­ion found that a lack of leadership in the UN mission — which has 13,000 uniformed personnel in South Sudan — culminated in a ‘chaotic and ineffectiv­e response’ during the July fighting.

The force’s Kenyan commander was sacked. — AFP

 ??  ?? People leave a migrant camp as they are evicted by French authoritie­s near the French port city of Dunkirk, at Grande-Synthe, northern France. — AFP photo
People leave a migrant camp as they are evicted by French authoritie­s near the French port city of Dunkirk, at Grande-Synthe, northern France. — AFP photo

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