Tensions regularly arise between shepherds and farming communities during the migration season in South Sudan.
Recently, farming communities have been complaining about the arrival of shepherds on their land. This is not without consequences on their cohabitation.
Displaced pastoralists armed with guns have been migrating onto lands occupied by farming communities, in recent years, stoking a new series of conflicts in the war-torn nation and threatening food supplies.
Sometimes, when we get to the host community, our cows eat crops cultivated by farmers not knowing that these are for humans. It causes many problems and we are forced to pay a heavy fine.
Cattle often destroy crops and farmers kill cattle threatening their harvests whenever herders move their animals in search for water and pasture.
To this end, the UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) has brought together shepherds and farmers in Tali, about 200 kilometres from Juba, to agree on how to resolve these conflicts .
The meeting brought together communities from five bordering regions – Terekeka, Amadi, Gok, Eastern and Western Lakes to reach an agreement that regulates cattle migration to prevent conflict in future.
It also identifies water resources and grazing lands and sets out compensation rules for the destruction of crops and beehives by cattle as well as theft or killings of livestock.
“It’s only the cattle keepers who are having arms and are making the farmers afraid of them. But for the farmers they are the losers because whenever these cattle camps come to the areas and destroy their crops, so they also cattle keepers harass them with their arms so they cannot say anything,” said Charity Micah Dawich, Secretary-General of the Joint Border Peace Committee.
“Sometimes, when we get to the host community, our cows eat crops cultivated by farmers not knowing that these are for humans. It causes many problems and we are forced to pay a heavy fine – usually a cow or two. The farmers also slaughter our cattle as revenge,” said David Achiek, Machar, who keeps cattle.
Fighting erupted in South Sudan in December 2013, two years after the country declared independence from Sudan.
The U.N. says the civil war has killed more than 10,000 people, caused over a million to flee and driven the country of 11 million towards famine.
The UN backed agreement also bans pastoralists from carrying guns, and obliges them to inform the local authorities about their movements.
“They collect the arms but you still see those arms making their way back into the hands of some cattle keepers and you wonder why,” said Machar.
The increased movement of livestock has led to diseases including East Coast Fever, foot-and-mouth disease spreading to previously uninfected areas, in the past.
Following independence, a political battle erupted in 2013 between supporters of President Salva Kiir and his former deputy Riek Machar and peace talks have shown little sign of progress.
Reuters
Newer articles:
- WHO says meningitis kills 28 in South Sudan as infections soar - 08/03/2018 03:48
- World's costliest dish: A plate of beans in South Sudan - 08/03/2018 02:03
- US pushes UN to consider arms embargo on South Sudan - 07/03/2018 20:09
- EU ready to impose South Sudan arms ban - 07/03/2018 16:00
- South Sudan close to famine, facing “toughest year” - 07/03/2018 14:55
Older news items
- South Sudan president rejects conditional SPLM reunification - 07/03/2018 12:50
- South Sudan - Crisis Fact Sheet #5, Fiscal Year (FY) 2018 - 07/03/2018 11:49
- South Sudan: Additional suspected Rift Valley fever death reported - 07/03/2018 05:26
- Bleak Women's Day in South Sudan, where #MeToo has no impact - 07/03/2018 03:57
- South Sudan denies using oil money to fund ongoing civil war - 06/03/2018 22:58
Latest news items (all categories):
- ATIDI approves USD84 million counter-guarantee to support financing of Rwanda’s new international airport - 15/07/2025 15:36
- South Sudan’s foreign minister in Washington for tense talks on deportations and governance - 15/07/2025 14:51
- Kenyan Transporters Warned Against Using Nimule–Juba Highway in South Sudan After 4 PM - 15/07/2025 14:49
- US Border Official Says Fate of Deported Migrants to South Sudan Unknown - 15/07/2025 14:28
- Call for peace, justice and reconciliation in South Sudan - 15/07/2025 14:25
Random articles (all categories):
- Sudan and South Sudan strike 'partial peace' deal - MinnPost.com - 28/09/2012 10:27
- Queues at Sudan bakeries as bread prices soar - 05/01/2018 06:07
- South Sudan: Machar Encourages Interactions Between Cultures and Traditions in South Sudan - 16/09/2013 06:49
- Floods leaves 20 dead in South Sudan - 01/10/2021 03:36
- South Sudan Journalist Detained, Radio Station Shut Down Over Report - 18/08/2014 22:42
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 119803 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 22813 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 22700 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 21998 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 19726 times