Gulf Today

UN says over 1,000 killed in 6 months in S.sudan

-

JUBA: The United Nations Mission in South Sudan said on Tuesday that more than 1,000 people have been killed and 400 abducted in communal conflicts in the past six months.

South Sudan is struggling to emerge from six years of conflict which formally ended with the creation of a power-sharing government in February.

Violence has soared in recent months between rival communitie­s, oten over catle raiding which leads to cycles of brutal revenge killings.

“More than 1,000 people died in Warrap in the past six months... there are a lot of people who want to go on and carry out revenge attacks for those that have died,” UN special envoy David Shearer said. Shearer warned that once the dry season arrives in January, the potential for further conflict in the central state was high.

Meanwhile, in eastern Jonglei, “hundreds” died in fighting this year “and more than 400 people were abducted.”

“The potential for conflict in Jonglei as a result... is very very high,” said Shearer.

He called for dialogue between communitie­s, and said UNMISS would deploy peacekeepe­rs to several temporary bases in some of the hotspots for violence.

Observers have warned that the communal violence risked derailing a peace agreement signed in September 2018 to end the war that killed nearly 400,000 people.

Key tenets of the deal, such as the unificatio­n of warring forces under one army, remain stuck.

Meanwhile, two people died on Tuesday in Somalia’s capital Mogadishu ater a suicide bomber blew himself up in a restaurant near a police base, a police spokesman and a witness said.

It was unclear who was behind the atack. “A blast occurred at a restaurant near School Policio (police base), we shall give details later,” police spokesman Sadik Ali told Reuters in a Whatsapp message.

A witness, shopkeeper Mohamed Ali, told

Reuters at least two people were dead from the blast.

“I understand this includes the restaurant owner. Police opened fire ater the blast,” Ali said, adding that he could see huge clouds of smoke rising above the restaurant and ambulances trying to reach the blast site.

Al Qaeda-allied group Al Shabaab frequently carries out bombings in Mogadishu and else where in Somalia as part of its campaign to topple the central government.

The group wants to establish its own rule in the Horn of African country based on its own strict interpreta­tion of Islam’s sharia law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain