Cape Times

AU must urgently set up S Sudan court to try gruesome war crimes

- Shannon Ebrahim

THE world’s newest country, South Sudan, has descended into chaos, and there is no court to try the most gruesome of war crimes.

The jubilation that met South Sudan’s liberation and independen­ce six years ago has now turned into disgust as government and opposition forces have systematic­ally butchered their fellow men, women and children.

In a report submitted to the UN Human Rights Council this week, the UN Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan has reported that troops are slitting throats, gouging out eyes, castrating and mutilating men, and gang-raping men and women on a massive scale.

Harrowing witness testimony and thousands of documents tie more than 40 senior military officers and officials in South Sudan to the war crimes, who need to be urgently prosecuted.

The question we need to ask is how the situation could have degenerate­d to this level of barbarity when the AU was establishe­d in 2001 in order to ensure that such war crimes and gross violations of human rights would never happen again.

The horrors of the Rwandan genocide had spurred the continent’s leaders to commit themselves to intervene rapidly to halt any future war crimes on the continent. But for all the AU’s theorising about rapid reaction forces, we have failed yet again to protect the victims of sheer and systematic brutality.

It is hard to imagine the horror that the civilians of South Sudan have been living through, as it is so far removed from our daily reality. UN secretary-general António Guterres said: “I’ve never seen a political elite with so little interest in the well-being of its own people.”

One commission­er has noted that the atrocities and violations are no longer confined to a few parts of South Sudan but are spread across the country.

It is not like this happened overnight or that we were oblivious to it. For months and even years we have been made fully aware of the travesty of justice that has been taking place.

In the four years since the violent conflict erupted in 2013, 4 million South Sudanese have been displaced. There has been a plethora of reports that fighters are deliberate­ly targeting civilians on the basis of their ethnic identity.

What exactly has been the response of the new AU Commission chairperso­n Moussa Faki Mahamat?

There is no doubt he fully appreciate­s the tragedy given that he said at the recent AU Summit, “in South Sudan we cannot understand the insane violence that the belligeren­ts inflict, with indescriba­ble cruelty, on a population that has suffered too much”.

But his solution hardly measures up to what the AU had pledged at its inception.

What he has proposed is to impose targeted sanctions on those who are obstructin­g peace. That is what one would have expected from the chairperso­n of the OAU, not the AU.

Surely Mahamat can be under no illusion that targeted sanctions are largely symbolic so that the AU is seen to be taking action, but they will never stop the carnage.

That is because the rationale behind the violence is a fight for the spoils of the state – it is a desperate race to the bottom to loot every imaginable resource for personal enrichment.

No manner of targeted sanctions is going to deter the kleptocrat­s from their fundamenta­l mission, nor will it put an end to their reign of terror.

As for the UN Security Council, for four years it has been resisting imposing an arms embargo on South Sudan.

This is not atypical of the apex body charged with maintainin­g internatio­nal peace and security. But at least the council decided last August to deploy a Regional Protection Force to secure the capital, which would then allow the UN troops already deployed to be reassigned to different locations across the country to protect civilians, support humanitari­an assistance, monitor and report on human rights abuses.

Now 200 000 internally displaced people are being protected in UN bases, but the sites only cover a fraction of the civilians in need of protection.

The crisis is clearly of such a magnitude that the AU simply does not have the resources to respond.

But where the AU must be expected to act immediatel­y is in the establishm­ent of a hybrid court to try those responsibl­e for grave human rights abuses.

The AU has procrastin­ated for two-and-a-half years in establishi­ng such a court as provided for in the 2015 peace agreement.

The establishm­ent of such a court was also recommende­d by the AU Commission of Inquiry on South Sudan.

Given all the AU’s criticism of the ICC, there really is no excuse for why the AU has not already operationa­lised such a court, with or without the co-operation of the Government of South Sudan.

It is time to give the victims some redress.

 ?? Picture: Unicef/Reuters ?? TIME OF WAR: It is hard to imagine the horror that civilians in South Sudan have been living through, as it is so far removed from our daily reality, says the writer.
Picture: Unicef/Reuters TIME OF WAR: It is hard to imagine the horror that civilians in South Sudan have been living through, as it is so far removed from our daily reality, says the writer.
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