PEACEKEEPERS REINFORCING IN
SOUTH SUDAN AMID CONTINUED FIGHTING
(Newsroom America) - The security
situation in South Sudan remains "fluid", the United Nations
peacekeeping mission in the country said, confirming that it is sending
reinforcements to areas affected by the current fighting between pro- and
anti-Government troops, particularly Bor, Malakal, Bentiu and Juba.
"This is critical to enable the
Mission to deliver on its mandate to protect civilians," UNMISS said.
It specified that thousands of additional
police, military, logistics support and selected civilian staff are being
relocated to the affected areas, per the Security Council's authorization.
Three weeks of violence in the world's
newest country have claimed thousands of lives and forced about 200,000 people
from their homes, many seeking refuge inside UN bases.
UNMISS said that two stand-by police
components known as Formed Police Units have been deployed to strengthen
security and order for civilians on UN compounds. A medical team from the UN
Mission in Cote d'Ivoire (UNOCI) arrived yesterday in Juba to bolster support
at the UN Juba bases. Logistical support for air operations is being provided
by the UN Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, MONUSCO.
More aircraft are arriving this week to
assist with transport of essential supplies to troops and civilians, the
Mission confirmed. They will be followed by additional police from Nepal, and
later also troop reinforcements.
The UN's humanitarian wing has
significantly reinforced its ability in Juba and other key areas of the
country, such as the Lakes State county of Awerial where up to 76,000 people
have gathered, in order to meet the needs of civilians.
According to the Mission, close to $100
million have been raised in the past 72 hours to bring in additional supplies
and staff to respond to the evolving situation.
Humanitarian partners in the country had
issued a $166 million plan to assist some 628,000 people over the next three
months. It includes provision of protection, water, food, shelter and
healthcare. It also aims to help those that have left Sudan and sought refuge
in South Sudan's Unity and Upper Nile states. UN officials have repeatedly
called for a cessation of violence and a political solution to the conflict,
including accountability for grave human rights violations. Representatives of
President Salve Kiir and the feuding former deputy president Riek Machar are
meeting in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa, in talks mediated by the
Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD). In a New Year's message to
the people of South Sudan, UNMISS chief Hilde Johnson voiced support for the
talks and summarized the agenda: an immediate cessation of hostilities, the
release of all political detainees, political dialogue and humanitarian access.
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