5 soldiers killed in shooting in South Sudan

5 soldiers killed in shooting in South Sudan

July 09, 2016
This file photo shows a large crowd waving the flag of the new Republic of South Sudan during the unveiling of a statue of late South Sudan rebel leader and first Vice President John Garang during a ceremony celebrating the independence of South Sudan from Sudan in the capital Juba. — AFP
This file photo shows a large crowd waving the flag of the new Republic of South Sudan during the unveiling of a statue of late South Sudan rebel leader and first Vice President John Garang during a ceremony celebrating the independence of South Sudan from Sudan in the capital Juba. — AFP

JUBA, South Sudan — Five South Sudanese government soldiers were killed in a shootout late Thursday between opposing army factions in the capital, a military official said on Friday, and the UN mission reported an attack on a senior official amid fears of a return to civil war in the world’s newest country.

A convoy of soldiers loyal to former rebel leader and sitting First Vice President Riek Machar opened fire on a checkpoint in Juba manned by troops from President Salva Kiir’s faction, said Lul Ruai Koang, a spokesman for government troops. Koang said five soldiers were killed.

“We returned fire but it was limited fire,” he said.

But Machar’s faction accused Kiir’s soldiers of firing on an opposition convoy as it approached the checkpoint in the Gudele area of Juba. Two soldiers from his side were wounded, said William Gatjieth, a spokesman for Machar’s group.

The violence echoed the skirmish between soldiers in Juba in December 2013 that sparked the country’s civil war in which tens of thousands of people were killed. The new fighting comes just before South Sudan marks its fifth independence anniversary on Saturday.

Separately, the UN mission reported an “indiscriminate shooting attack on a senior United Nations agency official” on Thursday evening in the Tomping area of Juba. The UN statement urged South Sudan authorities to investigate what it called a “grave violation” of the Status of Forces Agreement between South Sudan’s government and the UN.

South Sudan’s opposing army factions have been stationed in Juba since April, part of a peace deal signed last year to unite the warring sides.
They are meant to hold joint patrols to keep peace in the city, but they have yet to work together in Juba and remain stationed in separate areas.

The government forces should allow former opposition soldiers to join them at checkpoints and carry out security operations together, said Gatjieth, the spokesman for Machar’s faction.

South Sudan is at risk of returning to full-scale war because the two sides are not showing willingness to implement security arrangements, the conflict research group International Crisis Group warned last week.

In a statement on Friday, the Joint Monitoring and Evaluation Commission that monitors the cease-fire said the recent fighting in many parts of the country could be in “flagrant violation” of the peace deal, and it said security in the capital was “deteriorating.”

As a result of the rising tensions in Juba, international organizations have limited their movements in recent days. The UN mission said it had stepped up patrols around its base but would not increase patrols in the capital.

“The danger all along is with so many soldiers in this so-called demilitarized city of Juba that some kind of spark could set the whole thing off,” said John Young, a South Sudan expert with the Geneva-based Small Arms Survey research group.


July 09, 2016
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