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Sudan Tribune

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Civilians continue to bear brunt of violence in South Sudan: UN

September 26, 2023 (JUBA) – Civilians continue to bear the brunt of the violence in South Sudan, the United Nations mission in the country (UNMISS) said in a report.

The mission, in its latest Human Rights Brief released on Tuesday, said it had documented 222 incidents of violence against civilians, including 128 children, whereby 395 civilians were killed, 281 injured, 166 abducted, and 29 were subjected to conflict-related sexual violence between April and June 2023.

Compared to the previous quarter, this marks a 14% increase in violent incidents (194 to 222) and a 5% decrease in civilians harmed (from 920 to 871), it said.

“While the number of civilians killed decreased by two per cent (from 405 to 395), the number of people injured increased by 20 per cent (from 235 to 281),” partly reads the report from the UN mission in the country.

The number of abductions reportedly decreased from 266 to 166, while numbers of victims subjected to conflict-related sexual violence increased from 14 to 29.

Incidents perpetrated by community-based militias and/or civil defense groups commonly referred to as intercommunal violence accounted for majority of the victims, UNNISS said, adding “Geographically, Warrap State was the most affected by the chronic violence and accounted for 34 per cent of all civilian victims, followed by Jonglei, Upper Nile, Eastern Equatoria and Central Equatoria States”.

“Ordinary civilians in South Sudan pay dearly for these acts of violence. It is critical to strengthen justice and accountability systems for such crimes” said Nicholas Haysom, the Secretary-General’s Special Representative in South Sudan.

UNMISS said it documented 20 individuals affected by undue restrictions of fundamental freedoms, including through continuous censorship, harassment, arbitrary arrests, detention, and ill-treatment of individuals expressing critical or divergent views by security forces, which negatively impacted civic and political space.

However, Haysom vowed that UNMISS would continue to provide technical assistance and advocacy for a conducive environment for the exercise of civic and political freedoms as prerequisite for free, fair, and credible elections in 2024.

(ST)