The Press

US warns South Sudan govt against ‘deliberate starvation tactics’

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UNITED NATIONS: The United States warned South Sudan’s government yesterday that preventing humanitari­an aid workers from reaching parts of the war-torn state that are suffering famine could ‘‘amount to deliberate starvation tactics.’’

A civil war erupted in 2013 when President Salva Kiir, an ethnic Dinka, fired his deputy, Riek Machar, a Nuer, who has fled and is now in South Africa. The United Nations says at least one-quarter of South Sudanese have been displaced.

The United Nations has declared a famine in some parts of South Sudan, where nearly half the population - some 5.5 million people - face food shortages. But the country recently hiked work permit fees a hundredfol­d for foreign aid workers, to US$10,000.

‘‘The famine is not a result of drought, it is the result of leaders more interested in political power and personal gain than in stopping violence and allowing humanitari­an access,’’ Deputy US Ambassador Michele Sison told the Security Council.

‘‘The government’s continued unconscion­able impediment­s to humanitari­ans seeking access to famine-stricken population­s may amount to deliberate starvation tactics,’’ she said.

Russian Deputy UN Ambassador Petr Illichev disagreed, saying the famine was ‘‘linked not just to problems with security, but also with inclement weather conditions.’’

The Security Council said in a statement that it was ‘‘deeply concerned about the actions of all parties to the conflict that are perpetuati­ng the humanitari­an crisis.’’

However, the language was toned down from a draft that said the crisis was ‘‘the result of the actions of all parties to the conflict.’’

South Sudan Deputy Ambassador Joseph Mourn Majak Ngor Malok rejected accusation­s that the government was to blame for the famine, saying ‘‘it will spare no efforts to help address the situation and calls upon the internatio­nal community to assist in addressing this urgent matter.’’

Sison’s remarks give the first indication of how President Donald Trump’s administra­tion views the crisis in South Sudan.

The previous administra­tions of President George W. Bush and President Barack Obama were heavily involved in the birth of South Sudan, which signed a peace accord with Sudan in 2005 and gained independen­ce in 2011.

‘‘I wouldn’t characteri­se South Sudan as their top priority by any means, but I think it is positive and constructi­ve ... that they are planning to carry on being the lead in the Security Council,’’ said a senior U.N. diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity. - Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Men unload boxes of nutritiona­l supplement­s from an helicopter prior to a humanitari­an food distributi­on carried out by the United Nations World Food Programme in Thonyor, Leer county, South Sudan.
PHOTO: REUTERS Men unload boxes of nutritiona­l supplement­s from an helicopter prior to a humanitari­an food distributi­on carried out by the United Nations World Food Programme in Thonyor, Leer county, South Sudan.

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