Latest News

South Sudan Government says rebel advance is a serious threat to peace

South Sudan's Government urged opposition forces on Tuesday to stop fighting, claiming that a rebel advance in Jonglei State and ongoing clashes which have already caused mass displacement threaten to reignite civil war.

According to the United Nations, the scale of clashes between government forces and fighters loyal to 'the Sudan People's Liberation Army-in-Opposition' (SPLA-IO), has not been seen since 2017.

The government claimed that its forces had defeated rebel advances in Jonglei. This region stretches from the border of Ethiopia to central South Sudan.

Ateny Wek Ateny, the government's spokesperson and minister of information, said that "the ongoing security operation in Northern Jonglei State" is a necessary and lawful measure to halt the advancing rebel forces, restore public order and protect civilians.

He added: "The Government calls on the SPLM/A to cease hostilities immediately... Any actions that undermine the (2018) Agreement are a grave threat to peace and jeopardize ongoing transitional?process."

South Sudan's Military on Sunday ordered all civil servants and personnel of the U.N. Mission in South Sudan, and other charities, to evacuate three counties in Jonglei before its operation against opposition forces.

A spokesperson for U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres stated that the mission shared concerns about the possibility of the fighting putting hundreds of thousands civilians in danger.

The mission's spokesman warned that the rise in hate speech is fueling ethnic tensions, and could draw civilians into conflict.

UNMISS?on Sunday reported that at least 180,000 Jonglei residents had been forced to flee their homes by the fighting.

The civil 'war' between President Salva kiir and his vice president Riek Machar in 2013-18 was fought largely along ethnic lines, and it cost approximately 400,000 people their lives.

Machar is currently being tried for treason, after an ethnic group with historical ties to SPLA-IO took over an army base near the town of Nasir in the northeastern part of the country last year.

He has denied all charges. Denis Logonyi, Vincent Mumo Nzilani and Aiden Lewis edited the article.

(source: Reuters)