Archive for December 26, 2011

South Sudan’s Entrance on World Stage Includes Setting up Washington Embassy

Posted: December 26, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

View Photo Gallery —From left, Rose Oduho, Abuk Makuac and Apuk Ayuel dance after the South Sudanese president’s presentation Dec. 13. Linda Davidson / The Washington Post

By , Updated: Monday, December 26

It’s 9 p.m. and Sarah Chan’s high heels are clacking at top speed across this Woodley Park hotel lobby. She’s rushing hundreds of her South Sudanese brethren into cabs so they won’t miss President Salva Kiir, who’s speaking at a hotel a mile away.With the birth of a nation comes the birth of its embassy, a powerful emblem of its legitimacy and an assertion of the country’s identity on the world stage. South Sudan will soon officially join Washington’s 190 embassies, and Chan is one of 14 employees working for the fledging mission, whose first big undertaking is Kiir’s mid-December visit here as part of a U.S. government-hosted South Sudan development conference.
It was a grand, two-day coming-out party for the world’s newest nation, with a speech by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and meetings with a lineup of elites from Washington’s international, political, diplomatic and aid-and-trade communities.Kiir’s location wasn’t announced until the very last minute, a reminder that not everyone was eager to welcome the new country, whose July 9, 2011, independenceredrew the map of the world.“Sisters, brothers — hurry! Our president has arrived! We have to go !”Chan called out.Tonight, Chan commands attention. That’s partly because she’s the daughter of Sudan People’s Liberation Army commander Chan Dak, who was killed while fighting in the region’s long struggle for independence.Newly emerged from a brutal 25-year conflict that killed an estimated 2 million people, South Sudan is still building its foreign diplomatic service. While some of the Washington mission’s top envoys are trained in diplomacy, others, like Chan, are homespun talent.What they lack in polish, they make up for in pathos.“My feet are burning, but I have to keep running,” says Chan, who now lives in Alexandria. The curly-haired 24-year-old was dressed in her “most Washington outfit” — gray pants and a matching vest. “You know, we are all a little new at this. But we are so happy. If my father could see me now, he would know he didn’t die in vain.”

In a luxurious Dupont Circle hotel ballroom, Kiir is wearing his trademark cowboy hat, a sign that he’s a man of the people — a resonant gesture in a nation that is still largely made up of cattle herders and farmers who live in mud hut villages with few paved roads and sporadic electricity.

He welcomes the audience, a mix of Sudanese diasporans, U.N. officials and American business leaders interested in investing in the oil-rich nation.

Kiir, a former rebel commander, tells the crowd that South Sudan is now safe. He pauses. “Except for the places I listed earlier.” Some in the crowd laugh — they find his lack of calculated public relations skills endearing, they say.

Then a delegation of Sudanese villagers who were flown in to attend this International Engagement Conference spontaneously interrupt the speech with liberation songs once sung by child fighters. Even here in Washington, the Sudanese tradition of clapping and singing in the middle of a leader’s speech is difficult to tamp down. It’s in such stark contrast to the buttoned-up culture of Washington that, once again, there’s a smattering of laughter.

From the ground up

Unlike many Washington embassies, South Sudan’s does not yet have a high-powered K Street public relations firm. “We are doing everything on our own. But that’s going to change soon,” said Deng Deng Nhial, deputy head of the mission, who was working in corporate America until he was tapped by South Sudan’s leaders to get diplomatic training at the Netherlands Institute of International Relations Clingendael.

“Our country’s people have such a long story of struggle. Explaining our story will be the work of the embassy — introducing Washington and the community of nations to South Sudan and letting them know we are not just about war anymore. We are open for business.”In many ways, the role of the new embassy will be to define who and what South Sudan is now, said Lawrence Dunham, former assistant chief for protocol for diplomatic affairs with the State Department — the point of contact for foreign embassies. He suggests that Americans might confuse South Sudan’s war for independence with the conflict in Darfur, which is in western Sudan and is largely a separate issue.“Washington is a crossroads for everything, and the South Sudan Embassy absolutely needs to be here,” Dunham said. “But at first they may not have a large pool of career diplomats to select from. That’s happened in other countries before. But that will be part of the journey. It’s an exciting moment for South Sudan.”Leading the Washington mission is Ezekiel Lol Gatkuoth, a former fighter with a degree in criminal justice from the University of Maryland. Gatkuoth was the South Sudan rebel group’s political representative to Washington before South Sudan officially broke away. And, at 6-foot-8, he is the tallest envoy in Washington, according to the Washington Diplomat.He’s also one of the busiest. The mission will officially become an embassy by next month, he said, when it will be formally recognized by both the U.S. government and South Sudan’s new ministry of foreign affairs. “The U.S. is our most important relationship. It’s going to be nonstop busy. There won’t be time to sleep,” Gatkuoth said at the conference. “But it’s a very joyous moment. And some people never thought it would come.”While embassies may seem like introverted bureaucracies where papers are shuffled behind closed doors, they are actually vital outposts for a country’s chamber of commerce, said Stephen Fuller, a public policy professor at George Mason University who studies the impact of embassies on the region’s economy. “It’s what makes Washington a magnetic force for businesses who want to work in those 190 countries with embassies,” he said.The new embassy is drawing from an ad hoc talent pool. Many, like Chan, are part of a new generation, the children of the country’s lionized fighters. They’ve hired drivers and security from the Sudanese diaspora, some who fought for their country’s freedom, others who were just looking for work. There are also staffers like Nyakan Gile Lul, a Sudanese refu­gee who was managing the front desk at a Washington area Hilton several years ago when she noticed the leaders of her country’s independence movement reserving rooms and setting up offices.

When she heard the mission was open, she applied for a job right away.“It’s giving back to your country,” she said. “To know that what we had been dreaming of, our own freedom, our own nation, really happened. I had to be a part of that.”

Steady stream of visitors

The mission is in a suite of offices on the sixth floor of a modern office building at M and 20th streets NW. The Embassy of Vietnam is in the same building, as are law offices and a college prep business. It’s only six blocks from the Embassy of Sudan.

On any given day, the new mission of South Sudan receives visits and calls from the country’s storied “lost boys,” children of war who were separated from their families during the violence. Some are living in the Washington area in resettlement programs — and hoping for a job, any job, at the mission. They also field requests from Sudanese Americans who want their U.S. student loans waived so they can move back to South Sudan and use their education to build the new nation.

A former Miss South Sudan — Cecilia Adeng, 25 — stops by to say hello. She used to work for the mission, but she was tapped to move back to the new nation’s capital, Juba, and work in the president’s office.

The mission’s most passionate booster is Emmanuel Jal, a former child soldier who is now an international hip-hop star and activist. Jal, whose harrowing story was chronicled in the documentary and memoir “War Child,” describes himself as a modern-day nomad. He performs around the world and visits South Sudan’s similar missions in South Africa and London. But he says the one in Washington is the most responsive.

Gatkuoth took him out for Ethio­pian food during his last trip to Washington, Jal said, and the two spent hours talking Sudanese politics.

“I’m a people’s advocate. If the government’s not doing right, then I am going to say it,” he said. “All our efforts could be lost if the oil money is exploited and causes more fighting. ”

Jal is on hand for the president’s speech, and for a dance party the same evening. Chan is there, too, dancing as a DJ plays Jal’s hip-hop songs about fighting in the African bush as a child.

In the midst of a Sudanese line dance, she stops. She takes in the scene, one she finds amazing after so many years of war. On the dance floor, older USAID officials in suits are dancing with a delegation of Sudanese women brought to Washington for the conference and for a gender empowerment meeting with U.N. Women and the Institute for Inclusive Security.

“All of those women have family who were slaughtered during the war,” Chan said. “They have suffered more than we can understand.

“But look at us now. I’m sad because of all the people we lost. But at the same time, I am so happy. We are in a history-making period now,” she says. “We have something that’s ours. We have to make sure it’s good.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/south-sudans-entrance-on-world-stage-includes-setting-up-washington-embassy/2011/12/15/gIQAQHzQJP_story_2.html

South Sudan’s Washington coming-out party
Washington Post
South Sudan, which celebrated its independence July 9, was recognized July 14 during a flag-raising ceremony at the United Nations after a General Assembly vote to admit the country. Sarah Chan, whose father was killed in the long struggle for South

South Sudan has Introduced New Passports Valid for Five Years

Posted: December 26, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

South Sudan has introduced new passports valid for five years. FILE | AFRICA REVIEW |
By MACHEL AMOS in JubaPosted Thursday, December 22  2011 

South Sudan has received samples of new passports that meet international standards, an official said Thursday.

The Inspector General of Police, Gen Acuil Tito Madut, said the new passports would replace the old ones that were printed in July, but did not meet the required international standards.

The samples were printed by a British firm, De La Rue, which printed the first batch.

Gen Madut said the latest copies would be valid for five years, unlike the previous ones that should have been in use for only a year.

“They have been printed. We have received them – they will be issued after we finish the criteria,” Gen Madut said.

“We will issue the passports together with the National Identity cards,” he said, adding that the passports were in three categories: the ordinary, diplomatic and special.

The copies produced in July were not acceptable to many countries for lacking country code, which was replaced with triple x (XXX).

The new country code issued by International Telecommunications Cooperation is +211.

The parliament wants the acquisition procedure for the national identity cards and the passports tightened to ensure that non-South Sudanese do not abuse the process.

There have been concerns that foreigners procedurally acquired the nationality within the six years of the interim period since 2005.

Since it seceded in July through a widely peaceful referendum, South Sudan has been able to issue only birth certificates and it loosely continued with the national identity cards acquired within the united Sudan.

http://www.africareview.com/News/South+Sudan+gets+new+passports/-/979180/1294190/-/7dp8j1/-/index.html

South Sudan Celebrates Christmas As A Free Nation

Posted: December 26, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Socio-Cultural

The Emmanuel Jieng Parish catholic church members congregating during Christmas Day in Juba

WRITTEN BY RACHEL ALEK AGUER

The Emmanuel Jieng Parish catholic church members congregating during Christmas Day in JubaThe Emmanuel Jieng Parish Protestant church which has a congregation of over 5000 people joined the world in celebrating Christmas Day in Juba yesterday. This is the First time for South Sudanese to celebrate Christmas as an independent country.

Bishop Nathaniel Garang Anyieth who was the preacher of the day expressed his gratitude to the Almighty God and reminded the congregation that we are a free people now.

He read some verses from the Holy Bible that were talking about faith and freedom and urged the congregation to read from the books of David, Isaiah, Hebrew and John to understand the day well.

He said that the day was very important to many South Sudanese wherever they are because our God has granted them peace to worship him in their own country.

“South Sudan had been at war for a long period of time and our people have never had a chance to worship their God fully,” he said.

Anyieth urged South Sudanese to deceit from violence and to embrace peace and unity among themselves. “Peace is what we want,” he stressed.

Meanwhile the Pastor in charge of Emmanuel Jieng Mr. Philip Aduong Thiong asked the public to forgive each other and use the Christmas time for reconciliation.

The South Sudan Fiscal Allocation and Monitoring Commission Chairperson and an Emmanuel Jieng parish member Mr. Gabriel Mathiang Rok said that this is the first time we are celebrating Christmas as a free and independent nation. “What we are reminded is to praise God and to develop our nation,” he added.

Mrs. Rebecca Nyandeng the wife of the late hero Dr. John Garang told the congregation that our people had fought the war to give us this freedom. She reminded them that if there was something bothering them, they should just be patient, “let us not spoil our own freedom, those who are against the government will never succeed,” she noted.

Nyandeng encouraged the war widows to be patience and to keep on praying for their country.

http://www.oyetimes.com/news/105-africa/16593-south-sudanese-celebrate-christmas-as-a-free-nation

Yuon Malual: South Sudanese Refugee Killed in ArapCo Shooting

Posted: December 26, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

By John IngoldThe Denver Post

A man was shot to death in Arapahoe County this morning. (9News | )

Yuon Malual (9News | handout)

A refugee who fled from war in Sudan was shot to death early Monday in the parking lot of his Arapahoe County apartment complex.

Friends said Yuon Malual was returning home from his job working on public transit buses at about 3 a.m. Monday when he was shot. The Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office said Malual was found dead in his sport-utility vehicle by deputies responding to a 911 call from the 1100 block of South Xenia Street. A Sheriff’s Office news release spelled Malual’s first name as Youn.

No suspects have been identified, and the motive behind the killing has so far eluded investigators.

“It’s a very tragic death,” said Gatwec Dengpathot, a Sudanese refugee community organizer and friend of the family. “He did not have any enemies. He was a family guy.”

Malual is survived by a wife and five kids, ages 2 to 17, Malual’s nephew Mayor Guem said. Malual, 43, was an attentive father, willing to help his children with homework or walk them to the school bus, neighbors said.

“His job and his kids, that’s the way it was,” Guem said.

Dengpathot said Malual and his family resettled in Denver six years ago after escaping war in what is now South Sudan. Friends said Malual was ecstatic earlier this year when South Sudan gained independence from Sudan, ending the civil war that forced Malual to flee.

Dengpathot said Malual worked hard to provide for his family, and he said the killing shows how refugees’ industriousness can make them targets for violence in their adopted land.

“We escaped war in Sudan; we thought we are safe out here,” Dengpathot said. “And then somebody is getting killed in their parking lot.”

Guem said Malual’s wife was waiting in the family’s apartment — just steps from the parking lot — for her husband to come home when the shooting happened. Family members and friends began arriving to offer support as early as 4 a.m., he said. The sounds of wailing spilled out the apartment’s open door mid-day.

Neighbor Adrien Matadi said he and Malual always greeted each other in Arabic and said Malual was usually smiling.

“How could somebody just take the head of a family, having five kids, like this?” Matadi asked. “This is a disaster. This is really painful.”

John Ingold: 303-954-1068 orjingold@denverpost.com.

Man found dead in SUV in Arapahoe County

The Associated Press

DENVER—A 43-year-old man is dead in an apparent homicide near Denver.The Arapahoe County sheriff’s office said the body of 43-year-old Youn Malual was found in a gold-colored sport-utility vehicle around 3 a.m. on Monday. Authorities say he had been shot once in the head.

Bureau Chief Bruce Williamson said there are no suspects and no apparent motive for the shooting.

Williamson said the victim was an immigrant from Africa. The investigation was initially hampered by the language barrier but he said investigators were able to find a translator.

KDVR-TV reported that the victim was an immigrant from Sudan and that neighbors said he worked for a cleaning company.

Read more:Sudanese refugee killed in ArapCo shooting – The Denver Posthttp://www.denverpost.com/breakingnews/ci_19621181#ixzz1hhPKX0G5
Read The Denver Post’s Terms of Use of its content: http://www.denverpost.com/termsofuse

BBC’s Video: How Much Change has Independence Brought to South Sudan?

Posted: December 26, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-16333589

South Sudan has been independent from North Sudan for just under six months, following decades of civil war.

The new country is one of the least developed places on earth, despite having huge oil reserves.

James Copnall travelled to the capital, Juba, to find out how much change independence has brought to the lives of its citizens.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-16333589

Sudan’s ex-PM Launches Fierce Attack on Kiir’s Visit to Israel

Posted: December 26, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

Sudan’s ex-PM launches fierce attack on Kiir’s visit to Israel
Sudan Tribune
December 25, 2011 (KHARTOUM) – The former Sudanese Prime Minister and the leader of the opposition National Umma Party (NUP) Al-Sadiq al-Mahdi denounced a visit made by South Sudanpresident Salva Kiir to Israel this week describing it as “devilish”. 

Machar calls on South Sudan rebels to lay down their arms
Sudan Tribune
December 25, 2011 (JUBA) – South Sudan’s Vice President Riek Machar Teny has called on all the rebel groups in the newly established state to lay down their arms and join in the development of their country. Machar appealed to the rebels during the 

Oil-thirsty China stuck deep in Sudanese muck
The Seattle Times
By Andrew Higgins Workers for a company affiliated with China National Petroleum build facilities near Melut in South Sudan. China, which gets nearly a third of its imported crude oil from Africa, has invested billions of dollars in the past 15 years 

Kiir calls for peaceful Christmas celebrations and urges police to take charge
Sudan Tribune
By Ngor Arol Garang December 25, 2011 (JUBA)- South Sudan’s president Salva Kiir Mayardit on Sunday called for peaceful Christmas celebrations taking place across the new nation and urged police forces to take charge during the festivities. 

How much change has independence brought South Sudan?
BBC News
South Sudan has been independent from North Sudan for just under six months, following decades of civil war. The new country is one of the least developed places on earth, despite having huge oil reserves. James Copnall travelled to the capital, Juba, 

South Sudanese Celebrate Christmas As A Free Nation
Oye! Times
This is the First time for South Sudanese to celebrate Christmas as an independent country. Bishop Nathaniel Garang Anyieth who was the preacher of the day expressed his gratitude to the Almighty God and reminded the congregation that we are a free 

Archbishop Lukudu Calls For Reconciliation In South Sudan
Oye! Times
Archbishop Paolino Lukudu LoroThe Metropolitan Archbishop of Juba, Paolino Lukudu Loro has called upon the South Sudanese to engage in peace and reconciliation for the building of the new nation. His Grace urged the Catholic community to spearhead the 

Sudanese refugee killed in ArapCo shooting
Denver Post
Dengpathot said Malual and his family resettled in Denver six years ago after escaping war in what is now South Sudan. Friends said Malual was ecstatic earlier this year when South Sudan gained independence from Sudan, ending the civil war that forced 

UN urges South Sudan to act now to avert large-scale violence in Jonglei
UN News Centre
The United Nations today urged South Sudan to take all necessary measures to protect civilians in Jonglei state after reports identified thousands of armed youth preparing to attack a rival community. “I am deeply concerned to learn of reports of this
S. Sudan youth planning to attack tribe, UN warns
AFP
JUBA — Thousands of young people in South Sudan are preparing to attack a rival tribe in what could become a major tragedy, the United Nations warned on Monday. “I am deeply concerned to learn of reports of this imminent large scale attack on 
Sudan split drags oil-hungry China into the middle of a poisonous feud
Sydney Morning Herald
Months after its separation from Sudan, South Sudan is still facing many issues. Photo: Kate Geraghty JUBA, South Sudan: At a restaurant along the River Nile offering crocodile and ostrich meat, officials of the world’s newest – and desperately 
Foreign investment in South Sudan draws mixed reactions
Press TV
Juba Grand Hotel, one of South Sudan’s finest hotels and, like many other hotels, the work of a foreign investor. In South Sudan which gained its independence only six months ago, almost 90% of all the investments in private sectors are owned by 
Report: Israel bombed Sudan targets
Ynetnews
Sudanese officials deny report. Foreign media linked Israel to two similar previous attacks Sudanese newspaper al-Intibaha reported last week that the Israeli Air Force attacked vehicles in South Sudan, Ynet learned on Sunday. The report speculated on
Utah eye doctors restore sight to hundreds of blind people in Sudan
Deseret News
They worked in a tiny village in South Sudan, a part of the world ravaged by tribal conflict, civil war and astonishing levels of blindness. “In this part of the world, nearly 10 percent of the population is totally blind,” said Dr. Alan Crandall, 

Heavily Armed Nuer Youth Overrunning Murle Towns and Villages

Posted: December 26, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

Nuer Youth Have Captured Lolkuangole And Are Advancing To Capture All Murleland

For Immediate Release
Lou and Jikany Youth in Jonglei State, South Sudan
December 25, 2011

December 25, 2011 (SSNA) — The Nuer Youth of Lou and Jikany Nuer attacked Pibor County on December, 23rd and captured Lolkuangole town. Our forces are advancing towards other towns and Payams of Murle to end the root cause of Murle problem. Since the signing of CPA in 2005, Murle cattle raiders massacred more than 4,000 innocent Nuer civilians with impunity. Prior to the formation of the Government of South Sudan during the interim period, the Nuer used to protect themselves from Murle raiders without experiencing loses in humans and materials. The Nuer tragedy was brought about when the CPA was signed and the interim government of Southern Sudan began to disarm innocent Nuer civilians without providing them security. From 2005 up to 2011, Lou and Jikany Nuer lost over 35,000 cattle and 4800 people killed by the Murle.

Since the very government which disarmed the civilians in 2006 failed to protect the Nuer from Murle, the Nuer Youth have decided to protect their livelihood from Murle. To do so, we have decided to invade Murleland and wipe out the entire Murle tribe on the face of the earth as the only solution to guarantee long-term security of Nuer’s cattle. There is no other way to resolve Murle problem other than wiping them out through the barrel of the gun.

Since starting the operations against Murle, the SPLA army tried to protect them. However, our forces killed 80 SPLA soldiers on December, 24 and burned down one tank and three pickup Toyotas mounted with artilleries. The Nuer Youth will fight anyone who tries to protect Murle be it the SPLA or UN forces. Whenever Murle raid and massacre the Nuer, neither the UN nor the SPLA protect them. Now that the Nuer have decided to end Murle problem, the UN and the SPLA intervened to protect them. We the Nuer Youth have decided to fight the Murle, SPLA and the UN.

Our message to the United Nations’ forces in South Sudan is that they should leave the area if they don’t want to die. We have heavy weapons that can bring down helicopters and anybody standing on our way will be a casualty. The UN is hypocritical and useless organization which claims to have a mandate to protect civilians. But in the relation between the Nuer and Murle, the UN never protected the Nuer from Murle’s massacres in the past. What kind of UN is in South Sudan which claims to have the mandate of civilian protection by protecting one group of civilians while leaving the others to be massacred? If Nuer are civilians like Murle, then the UN should have protected them from Murle’s raiders long time ago. If UN cares much about Murle by ignoring other tribes in Jonglei, then, the UN forces will face the Nuer’s wrath this year. Whatever weapons the UN may have, they will not withstand the weapons of Nuer Youth which can liquidate UN tanks. If the UN forces want to protect Murle and themselves, they have to get F-16 Fighter Jets because the Nuer White army has stronger firepower than the UN forces. The UN forces in South Sudan do not have the same firepower like Nuer Youth and they are not a threat to Nuer at all. They will be annihilated in one battle.

The Nuer Youth White Army will continue operations on the daily basis until all Murle are finished so that they will not raid the Nuer anymore. We call on SPLA soldiers who do not want to die this year to stay out of our way. The Nuer White Army is well armed and no power can stop it.

For contact:
Information Office
Lou and Jikany White Army
Akobo, Jonglei State
South Sudan
South Sudan youth planning to attack tribe, UN warns(AFP) – 

A Sudanese boy rounds up cattle in a camp in Jonglei in 2009 (AFP/File, Peter Martell)

JUBA — Thousands of young people in South Sudan are preparing to attack a rival tribe in what could become a major tragedy, the United Nations warned on Monday.

“I am deeply concerned to learn of reports of this imminent large scale attack on civilians in Jonglei state,” Hilde Johnson, who heads the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS), said in a statement.

“The government must act now if we are to avert a major tragedy.”

UNMISS air patrols over the weekend identified thousands of armed Lou Nuer youths preparing to attack communities of the Murle tribe near Likuangole in Jonglei, the UN said.

On Sunday a group calling itself the Nuer Youth White Army issued a statement vowing to “wipe out the entire Murle tribe on the face of the earth as the only solution to guarantee long-term security of Nuer’s cattle.”

The group accuse the Murle of raiding Nuer cattle and killing members of their tribe since 2005, when a peace agreement ended two decades of civil war and led to South Sudan’s independence in July this year.

Neither the UN nor South Sudan’s former rebel army the SPLA have protected the Nuer, the group alleged.

“We the Nuer Youth have decided to fight the Murle, SPLA and the UN,” it said.

Johnson said the primary responsibility for protecting civilians lies with the government in Juba, but UNMISS has reinforced its peacekeepers in Jonglei while conducting continuous air patrols to deter potential violence.

Inter-communal violence has already affected “so many civilians,” UNMISS said, calling for reconciliation.

“Time is now running out and the government needs to redouble its efforts to prevent a tragedy and avert large-scale violence. All South Sudanese people must now put peace and stability in their new and independent country above any other concerns and interests”, Johnson said.

The UN had already raised an alarm in September over cattle raids that had left around 1,000 people dead since June, calling it a crisis that threatened to engulf the nation.

Johnson said at the time the raids involved “army-like” movements of people with new weapons and satellite phones.

“So this is not normal cattle rustling,” she said.

Army spokesman Philip Aguer alleged that the assailants were armed and supported by Sudan.

Khartoum has also accused South Sudan of supporting rebels within its territory.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5isHdWaL2t_85g2lhh8QO4I5lCXXg?docId=CNG.338344ab8d18dae52f81ea10b09cb127.7b1

UN urges South Sudan to act now to avert large-scale violence in Jonglei
UNMISS peacekeepers deployed in Jonglei State

26 December 2011 –

The United Nations today urged South Sudan to take all necessary measures to protect civilians in Jonglei state after reports identified thousands of armed youth preparing to attack a rival community.“I am deeply concerned to learn of reports of this imminent large-scale attack on civilians in Jonglei State,” said Special Representative for the Secretary-General to South Sudan, Hilde F. Johnson. “The Government must act now if we are to avert a major tragedy.”Over the weekend, air patrols of the UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) identified thousands of armed Lou Nuer youth preparing to attack Murle communities near Likuangole in Jonglei state.

Ms. Johnson stressed that the primary responsibility for protecting civilians lies with the Government and added that UNMISS has reinforced its peacekeepers in key areas of Jonglei and is conducting continuous patrols to deter potential violence.

“Time is now running out and the Government needs to redouble its efforts to prevent a tragedy and avert large-scale violence,” Ms. Johnson said. “All South Sudanese people must now put peace and stability in their new and independent country above any other concerns and interests.”

Over the past months UNMISS has consistently called for an end to ethnic violence in the region, and has deployed resources to prevent and mitigate conflict in the Lou Nuer, Murle and Dinka communities. The Mission has also facilitated a reconciliation process between various communities, particularly the inclusive peace process led by the Sudan Council of Churches.

UNMISS called on all communities in Jonglei State to put an end to the inter-communal violence and to actively and immediately engage in a reconciliatory peace process.

http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=40841&Cr=South%20Sudan&Cr1=

New Year’s Eve Party 2012

Posted: December 26, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

You’re invited to our second annual New Year’s Eve Party at the Best Western Rockville Hotel in Rockville, Maryland. The PARTY starts @ 7:30P.M.!!!!!!
NEW YEAR’S EVE PARTY 2012!!!
Saturday, December 31, 2011 to Sunday, January 1, 2012
7:30PM
Open your invitation
NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY 2012!!!
Punchbowl
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