Los Angeles Times

U.S. envoy Haley forced to flee South Sudan camp

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JUBA, South Sudan — The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, was evacuated from a U.N. camp for displaced people in South Sudan on Wednesday because of a demonstrat­ion against President Salva Kiir, witnesses said.

Shortly after Haley left the camp, U.N. security guards fired tear gas to disperse the crowd of more than 100 residents who looted and destroyed the office of a charity operating there, an aid worker at the camp said. The aid worker spoke on condition of anonymity out of safety fears.

Haley, in the middle of a three-country African visit, met earlier Wednesday with Kiir over the country’s long civil war. Speaking later to the U.N. station Radio Miraya, Haley said she warned Kiir that the U.S. no longer trusted South Sudan’s government and was no longer prepared to wait for change. She did not give details.

The United Nations confirmed the incident involving Haley, saying camp residents “became upset that she was not able to meet with them, due to time constraint.” The U.S. Embassy did not comment on Haley’s evacuation.

Frustratio­n has been growing inside and outside South Sudan over the conflict that has killed tens of thousands and created Africa’s largest displaceme­nt of civilians since the Rwanda genocide in 1994.

“People are not happy,” said one resident of the U.N. camp who spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear for his safety. He said camp residents had been waiting to hand Haley a letter with their position on the “current crisis.” The U.N. said a “petition” was delivered before Haley’s departure.

“We are disappoint­ed by what we are seeing. This is not what we thought we were investing in,” Haley said in remarks later released by the U.N. “What we thought we were investing in was a free, fair society where people could be safe and South Sudan is the opposite of that.”

Haley is the highest-level U.S. government official to visit South Sudan since President Trump took office. She is in Africa to see the involvemen­t of the U.S. and United Nations in Ethiopia, South Sudan and Congo, where she will be on Thursday.

In his meeting with Haley, South Sudan’s president appealed for the Trump administra­tion to stay engaged with his devastated country. According to a statement by his office, Kiir “emphasized his commitment” to end the conflict through peace talks that took place in the capital, Juba, last week and are expected to resume in December.

“All disputes can only be resolved through dialogue and not arms,” Kiir told Haley, the statement said. Multiple attempts at peace deals have failed in the past.

The United States is South Sudan’s largest donor and was instrument­al in the country’s creation. Since the East African nation gained independen­ce in 2011, the U.S. has given more than $5 billion for humanitari­an and developmen­t initiative­s, according to the U.S. Embassy.

South Sudan plunged into civil war in late 2013, and the country faces mass displaceme­nt, starvation and allegation­s of government corruption and war crimes. More than 2 million people have fled the country.

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