OCHA/Cecilia Attefors | An armed individual in the town of Pibor, in Jonglei state, South Sudan. Pibor has seen violent clashes and confrontations that have resulted in displacement as well as destruction of livelihood and property. (File)
Extreme violence and attacks involving thousands of fighters at a time have engulfed more than three-quarters of South Sudan, UN human Rights Council-appointed investigators said[1] on Friday, warning that the bloodshed faced by civilians are “the worst recorded” since the country’s civil war began in December 2013.
Highlighting a continuing lack of local and national infrastructure almost a year since the formation of the Revitalized Transitional Government of National Unity in South Sudan, Yasmin Sooka, Chairperson of the Commission on Human Rights in the country noted that although the signing of the Revitalized Peace Agreement two years ago had “led to a reduction in hostilities at the national level”, the country seen “a massive escalation in violence” locally.
Power vacuum filled by fighting
Echoing that finding, Commission member Barney Afako explained that signing the cessation of hostilities ceasefire had left “a vacuum” at the community level.
“There are no governors in place or no county commissioners in place. So, there is nobody to deal with those cleavages which had remained. Instead what we saw, was that the weaponry that have been left in the community as well as that which is now supplied by others fuelled this communal violence”, he said.
Other worrying developments include restrictions and self-censorship among journalists and pressure groups.
New level of fear
“The level of State suppression and inability of civil society or journalists to operate is now completely different”, said Commission member Andrew Clapham. “There is sort of levels of fear and the State suppression and the fact that you can be picked up and tortured and killed is rather different”.
In its latest report, the Commission describes “waves of attacks and reprisals” that have left hundreds of South Sudanese women, men and children dead, maimed or destitute in Jonglei State and the Greater Pibor Administrative Area.
Ms. Sooka told journalists via video conference that the armed groups and militias had mobilized along ethnic lines, often with the support of armed State and opposition forces.
She highlighted clashes last year between allied Dinka and Nuer militias and Murle pastoralist militias with massive violations against civilians, including killing and displacement.
“We have documented the new levels of militia violence engulfing more than three-quarters of the country at a localized level in which children carry weapons and women are traded as spoils of war like chattels”, Ms. Sooka said.
‘Children all have guns’
The Commission Chairperson said that civilians described combatants using weapons that they had never seen before.
“One man told the Commission, ‘I went to Pibor town and I saw guns being sold there. There the black guns used by the NSS were being sold for 25,000 South Sudanese shillings, each less than a few hundred dollars.’ He also said that children all have guns”, she recounted.
Ms. Sooka also described as “shocking” the high number of fighters involved in localized conflicts and highlighted that women were traded as “spoils of war”.
Moreover, children carry weapons and the levels of violence “have already surpassed” those documented in December 2013, when civil war erupted.
Forced to fight, identities erased
Describing attacks in Jonglei and the Greater Pibor area, she pointed to “systemically and deliberately torched” homes, murders, forced displacements, abductions, rapes, sexual enslavement and, in some instances, forced marriages to captors. Abducted boys have been forced to fight and, sometimes “forcibly assimilated into rival armed groups”.
These victims have had their ethnic and other identities “completely erased”, according to the Commission’s report, which noted that as of December 2020, hundreds of abductees were still missing, with hundreds of thousands displaced by the violence and recurrent flooding.
The Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan is due to present its report to the Human Rights Council[2] in Geneva on 10 March.
- ^ said (www.ohchr.org)
- ^ United Nations Human Rights Council (www.ohchr.org)
- ^ APO Group (apo-opa.com)
- ^ Download logo (www.africa-newsroom.com)
Newer articles:
- UN reports that despite peace agreement, South Sudan experiencing extreme levels of localized violence - 21/02/2021 10:30
- Sudan floats currency, part of measures to overhaul economy - 21/02/2021 01:22
- East Africa emerges as global leader of mobile money transfers - report - 20/02/2021 01:05
- As peace deal drifts, South Sudan risks fresh crisis - 19/02/2021 18:47
- Catholic clinic in South Sudan closes temporarily as doctors test positive for Covid - 19/02/2021 12:20
Older news items
- 20 employees in South Sudan president's office contract Coronavirus - 19/02/2021 09:20
- Staggering Level of Violence in South Sudan Threatens to Spiral Out of Control, UN Warns - 19/02/2021 09:05
- South Sudan's army plans to resume civilian disarmament after violent clashes - 19/02/2021 08:42
- South Sudan’s current violence ‘lot worse’ than during civil war - 19/02/2021 06:18
- Violence still raging in South Sudan despite peace deal - UN - 19/02/2021 01:53
Latest news items (all categories):
- The Voice of Responsibility: How Young South Sudanese are Saying No to Violence Through Music, Drama, and Digital Content - 03/06/2026 16:56
- Peace fails if it is not defended. The UN’s peacekeepers cannot do this alone - 03/06/2026 16:39
- 'Brink of famine': Why South Sudan’s children are paying the price of war - 03/06/2026 16:34
- Volleyball Cranes defeat South Sudan to maintain perfect start - 03/06/2026 16:30
- 'I've seen love': South Sudan bishop applauds Canadians during first visit - 03/06/2026 16:26
Random articles (all categories):
- [video] Can South Sudan combat corruption? - 06/06/2012 14:51
- South Sudan armed opposition accuses government of further ceasefire violations - 21/09/2015 23:33
- In South Sudan ghost town, diggers clear space for bodies - 16/02/2014 10:41
- Most dangerous countries to visit in 2023 - 03/11/2022 00:14
- Japan injects sh3.6b into South Sudan peace deal - 08/02/2019 03:58
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 145364 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 27294 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 24531 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 23909 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 21751 times