(catholicsun.org)
JUBA, South Sudan (CNS) — One month after two Catholic sisters were executed on a road in South Sudan, their killers remain unidentified, and church leaders are losing patience with an apparent lack of progress in resolving the murder.
In a Sept. 15 pastoral message, the country’s bishops stated that they “condemn unreservedly” the Aug. 16 killing of Sacred Heart Sisters Mary Daniel Abud and Regina Roba, who died with several others during an attack on their chartered bus on the road between Juba and Nimule.
While government leaders quickly condemned the killings, they suggested responsibility lay with a rebel group with which they’ve been at war since 2013. Survivors of the attack, however, reported the killers wore military uniforms and spoke Dinka and Arabic, suggesting that they were government soldiers.
On Aug. 17, President Salva Kiir said the attack demonstrated the lack of commitment to peace among those who did not sign a 2018 peace agreement, and thus the government would “reconsider its position” toward ongoing talks, with the holdout groups mediated by the Community of Sant’Egidio.
While the bishops called for forgiveness, they demanded that the killers be “identified and held to account.”
“We reject the language of ‘unknown gunmen.’ The local community usually knows who the killers are, but they (killers) are allowed to escape with impunity. We reject attempts to use this tragedy to derail the peace process,” the bishops stated.
Sister Alice Jurugo Drajea, superior general of the Congregation of Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, told Catholic News Service she was frustrated with the government’s response.
“That same afternoon I expected the state to send helicopters to go and search for those people. That did not happen. Until now we have no update. The sisters just died like anybody else. In this country, being murdered is like being born. It’s normal,” she said.
Sister Jurugo Drajea said she and the two sisters and other members of her congregation had traveled to Loa, near the country’s southern border, to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Our Lady of the Assumption Parish, which is where her congregation was founded.
The area is largely abandoned, as most local residents fled in recent years to refugee camps in Uganda. Yet Sister Jurugo Drajea said government officials, including Kiir, came to the Aug. 15 church celebration to encourage Catholics to reestablish a presence in the community, believing it would help lure hesitant refugees to return.
Archbishop Stephen Ameyu Martin Mulla of Juba announced at the celebration that he was appointing a parish priest to Loa.
Yet Sister Jurugo Drajea said the killing of the two sisters the following day sent the opposite message.
“If the sisters had been caught in a crossfire, it might be a different story. But the killers met the sisters face to face. They saw Regina running with her veil. They saw the veil on Mary and shot her in the face. Where does this anger come from, this anger toward the sisters and toward the church? We don’t understand.
“In all the wars we have lived through, none of our sisters have died from bullets. This is the first time. We connect it to the good message the president and others delivered the day before. They said there is peace and encouraged the people to come back. If the sisters went back, it would obviously attract others to return,” she said.
“It’s clear to us that the killing of the sisters was an act of deterrence. If they can hit the sisters, then others in the church will fear to go back, and then the people will not come back to the place, either.”
Sister Jurugo Drajea said that after the civil war drove residents from the area, in their wake, Dinka cattle keepers brought their animals to graze on what were once farms belonging to members of the Madi tribe.
“Today the place is occupied by people with large herds of cattle. And they have lots of guns,” she said.
“I grew up among people who had animals, and shepherds would carry sticks. Not guns. Guns were reserved for military people. But not now.”
In their pastoral message, the bishops acknowledged other church workers who have been targeted with violence in recent years, including Bishop-designate Christian Carlassare of Rumbek, who was shot and wounded in April. A priest and two of his relatives are in jail in relation to the attack. Bishop-designate Carlassare, an Italian, is recovering in Italy.
The two nuns killed in August were South Sudanese. Sister Abud was head teacher at the Usra Tuna school in Juba. Sister Roba was a tutor and administrator at the Catholic Health Training Institute, a project of Solidarity with South Sudan in the city of Wau.
“I am angry. They killed the South Sudanese who are teaching their children and nursing their families,” Sister Jurugo Drajea said.
The sisters’ execution has nonetheless provoked something positive, she said.
“Mary and Regina died on a pilgrimage to express their faith. They are the new martyrs of South Sudan. We feel pleased and humbled that our small congregation, the first congregation of women religious founded in what is today South Sudan, should be invited, through these two members, to earn this status of martyrdom in their own country. We feel humbled, and we are strengthened in our commitment to continue the work of God for the people.”
Newer articles:
- South Sudan government pledges funding for International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) commitments on sexual and reproductive health - 17/09/2021 12:00
- WHO and the Government of Japan establish a port health facility at Juba International ... - 17/09/2021 11:07
- Uganda, South Sudan form joint COVID-19 committee - 17/09/2021 09:48
- UNMISS Child Protection trains 60 members of South Sudan's armed forces on child rights - 17/09/2021 03:18
- Sudan crimes: Khartoum, other cities see a surge in violence - 17/09/2021 01:03
Older news items
- Minister Oryem tells traders to avoid South Sudan if they can’t handle its challenges - 16/09/2021 09:10
- Promoting East Africa as the Top African Exploration Marke - 16/09/2021 03:25
- Nicholas Haysom: New South Sudan Parliament can 'infuse urgency' into peace process - 16/09/2021 03:08
- Food insecurity at highest levels in South Sudan - 16/09/2021 02:50
- Chinese envoy calls for efforts to build on gains in South Sudan's political process - 16/09/2021 02:36
Latest news items (all categories):
- JUSTICE, OR VENDETTA? - The Consequences of Kirr's pursuit - 10/10/2025 21:43
- Palestine: An ongoing tragedy - 10/10/2025 21:35
- Sudan and South Sudan Sign Pact to Protect Oil Pipeline, Critical Oil Infrastructure - 10/10/2025 19:22
- RJMEC: "There is a risk of a large-scale resumption of civil war in South Sudan" - 10/10/2025 19:15
- How communities safeguard mental health in South Sudan - 10/10/2025 19:05
Random articles (all categories):
- The Netherlands, IOM launch Euro 11 Million project to tackle Bor floods - 09/05/2022 02:09
- Humanitarian Coordinator in South Sudan condemns aid worker death in Pibor and calls for end of violence - 02/11/2020 02:49
- UN chief warns of South Sudan genocide unless world acts - 19/12/2016 22:51
- Kenya, South Sudan to Focus on Joint Highway Project - 23/05/2013 18:57
- SPLM LEADERSHIP Didn’t UNDERSTAND THE CPA PROVISION UNTIL RECENTLY!!! - 19/07/2008 08:52
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 130896 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 24451 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 23462 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 23173 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 20399 times