South Sudan: peace on paper, conflict on the ground
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| CHILDREN PRAYING FOR PEACE IN SOUTH SUDAN |
JUBA,
South Sudan, Jul 8 – South Sudan marks five years of independence on Saturday,
with a peace deal stalled, violence ongoing, and hunger the worst it has ever
been.
Tens
of thousands have died in the war that started in December 2013 in the world’s
youngest nation, and conflict continues despite the forging of a unity
government.
Violence is ongoing,
including between multiple militia forces who pay little heed to either
President Salva Kiir or his former rival turned Vice-President Riek Machar. Although
the scale of battles has eased, clashes have taken place across the country.
In June, fighting in
the town of Wau now the country’s second city after Malakal, Bor and Bentiu
were razed during the war forced some 88,000 to flee their homes, with almost
20,000 seeking shelter beside a UN base.
UN aid chief for South
Sudan, Eugene Owusu, expressed “shock and outrage” earlier this month after
visiting the town where people described “horrendous acts of violence” with
bodies left scattered on the streets.
Molla Hailemariam, an
Ethiopian major-general heading the internationally backed ceasefire monitoring
team, said he was “deeply concerned” at recent fighting with “limited progress”
in implementing the peace deal.
Peace
process stalled
The two sides are deadlocked
over where troops from their respective armies should gather — designated
cantonment sites where troops are meant to surrender weapons and are arguing
over the number of states.
Last year Kiir ordered
the number of regional states be nearly tripled to 28, undermining a
fundamental pillar of the power-sharing deal.
Ceasefire teams have
meanwhile been repeatedly blocked from accessing key areas.
Famine
warnings
Nearly five million
people more than ever before need food aid to survive, the UN warns.
Over two million
people have been forced from their homes since the war began, with over 700,000
fleeing as refugees to neighbouring nations.
A report by the
Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) organisation singled out
areas of Unity and Bahr el Ghazal states as hardest hit.
According to the IPC
analysis, conditions in some areas have already reached the most severe
category of “catastrophe” or “phase five”. However the technical term “famine”
is not declared until those conditions are faced by a fifth of the population.
Economic
collapse
South Sudan is
struggling with soaring inflation caused by the war, rampant corruption and the
near collapse of the oil industry upon which the vast percentage of government
foreign exchange earnings depend.
The International
Monetary Fund (IMF) has warned the economy is in ruins with inflation at almost
300 percent and the currency slumping by 90 percent this year.
Central bank
international reserves to cover imports “have dwindled to a few days” the IMF
said this month, with the government’s deficit expected to top $1.1 billion
(999 million euros) this year, some

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