#SouthSudan: Please, Pray for Peace
Posted on | December 21, 2013 | 12 Comments
Heartbreaking photo: Nuer girl shot in face in #SouthSudan violence pic.twitter.com/8JtsumFb85 via @jsolomon740
— Robert Stacy McCain (@rsmccain) December 21, 2013
It has been said by numerous observers in recent days that South Sudan is the “world’s newest nation,” and most people in America have no idea how long and how hard South Sudan fought to gain its independence from the Muslim regime in Khartoum. That the people of this newborn nation would so soon risk losing all they had fought for — well, it’s shocking beyond words.
Watching the news develop — and thanks very much to Twitchy for taking notice — I’ve been absolutely heartbroken, and trying hard not to write a long essay about this mess. Reuters reports:
The United Nations estimated on Friday that at least 11 people from the ethnic Dinka group in South Sudan were killed during an attack by thousands of armed youths from a different ethnic group on a U.N. peacekeeping base in Jonglei state.
About 2,000 ethnic Lou Nuer youths overran the U.N. base in Akobo on Thursday, killing two of the 43 Indian peacekeepers and fleeing with arms and ammunition, the United Nations said. . . .
French U.N. Ambassador Gerard Araud, president of the U.N. Security Council for December, said there were now fears that a similar attack could occur in Bor, where several thousand armed youths had gathered near a U.N. base sheltering 14,000 civilians. The Nuer massacred Dinka in Bor in 1991.
“There were two or three thousand people with heavy weapons who were close to the camp so there was, of course, the worry about what they were going to do since it would be exactly the same scenario as what happened in Akobo,” Araud told reporters after deputy U.N. peacekeeping chief Edmond Mulet briefed the council on the situation in South Sudan.
Armed rebels were said to be in control of some of South Sudan’s oil fields Friday, raising questions of how long the country’s oil will flow and whether Sudan could enter the conflict.
President Salva Kiir implored his country to turn away from ethnic violence and met Friday with foreign ministers from neighbouring states, including Kenya and Ethiopia, who flew into Juba, the capital, to help calm tensions after a week of ethnic strife that is estimated to have killed hundreds.
Even if the negotiations succeed in preventing the spread of fighting, there has already been serious damage done — many tens of thousands of refugees have fled the violence — and the fragile economy of South Sudan will take months to recover. Today’s New York Times headline: “South Sudan Steps Closer to Unraveling.”
RT @HeidiVogt: Final version of our @wsj story on #SouthSudan crisis spreading to #oil region: http://t.co/ig3E9JpYi8
— Ian Cox (@IanECox) December 21, 2013
VIDEO: @Lesley_Warner reports on #SouthSudan violence http://t.co/hSW8tiYFX8 on PBS @NewsHour
— Robert Stacy McCain (@rsmccain) December 21, 2013
"The #UPDF troops have entered Juba at the invitation of the government in #SouthSudan to secure the capital" http://t.co/sYK0u3KsgQ
— Robert Stacy McCain (@rsmccain) December 21, 2013
This story is developing rapidly and the next 48 to 72 hours may be crucial. You’re not likely to get much news about this crisis from the networks, so the best way to keep track of the situation is to watch the #SouthSudan hashtag on Twitter.
Comments
12 Responses to “#SouthSudan: Please, Pray for Peace”
December 21st, 2013 @ 2:49 am
RT @rsmccain: #SouthSudan: Please, Pray for Peace http://t.co/sZcPGVLng0 #tcot #p2
December 21st, 2013 @ 2:52 am
Sad story… important read! RT “@rsmccain: #SouthSudan: Please, Pray for Peace http://t.co/ktdzLrTxgE #tcot #p2”
December 21st, 2013 @ 2:54 am
RT @bmcsmith92: Sad story… important read! RT “@rsmccain: #SouthSudan: Please, Pray for Peace http://t.co/ktdzLrTxgE #tcot #p2”
December 21st, 2013 @ 2:55 am
RT @rsmccain: #SouthSudan: Please, Pray for Peace http://t.co/sZcPGVLng0 #tcot #p2
December 21st, 2013 @ 7:37 am
[…] Read the rest … […]
December 21st, 2013 @ 9:57 am
RT @smitty_one_each: TOM #SouthSudan: Please, Pray for Peace http://t.co/FUThTK3T84 #TCOT
December 21st, 2013 @ 11:33 am
Gee, it’s almost like they were a fractious collection of rival ethnicities united only by a common enemy and not an inspiring vision of government and man’s place in the universe or something.
December 21st, 2013 @ 11:52 am
[…] Dec. 21: #SouthSudan: Please, Pray for Peace […]
December 21st, 2013 @ 2:02 pm
[…] #SouthSudan: Please, Pray for Peace […]
December 21st, 2013 @ 3:44 pm
The Lon Nuer are nomadist animists who resisted British rule and began to hate the Dinka for cooperating. This ethnic hatred is handed down as a verbal tradition. Before the forced disarmament a few years ago, they were the source of the “White Army” rebels, so called because they smeared their faces with ash. After the rebellion was put down and “peaceful” secession accomplished, the old commanders simply had no control over the sometimes large bands of Nuer youth who wander the area robbing and killing.
These appear to be young men who been raised to fight and hate the Dinka. There may not be any central control at all, so the only way to stop them may be to kill enough of them to drive them off.
December 23rd, 2013 @ 1:54 pm
[…] TOM: Pray for peace in Sudan… TOM: Three US troops wounded by Sudanese rebels (go in heavy or don’t go at all…) TOM: Obama to South Sudan: Good luck… […]
December 29th, 2013 @ 7:04 am
[…] #SouthSudan: Please, Pray for Peace […]