Archive for January 3, 2012

Murle: The Child Snatchers of South Sudan

Posted: January 3, 2012 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

Girls and boys in southern Sudan do not need bogeyman scare stories to make them behave: the child snatchers are real.

By Peter Martell, in Pochalla for AFP

“They come with guns and steal our children, then kill the rest of us,” said Aballa Abich, a tired-looking mother waiting for food aid deliveries in the troubled state of Jonglei.

“Day or night they can attack. We are frightened to let our children out of our sight,” added Abich, who comes from the Anyuak people of Pochalla, one of several peoples in the ethnically divided region.

Hundreds of children have been abducted into slavery in a series of bloody clashes between rival groups – including Abich’s five-year-old nephew.

“They took him two years ago when he was out hunting in the bush,” Abich said sadly. “There has been no news since, only attacks taking more children.”

Clashes between the Anyuak’s cow-herding neighbours in south Sudan erupt frequently, often provoked by cattle rustling, disputes over grazing or in revenge for previous attacks.

But the small-scale battles have grown in frequency and size in the remote and swampy region which remains awash with automatic weapons from the 22-year civil war between north and south Sudan, which formally ended in 2005.

A series of bloody raids this year has left many people in shock, and there has been a sharp increase in attacks apparently deliberately targeting women and children.

At least 370 children have been snatched in southern Sudan during inter-ethnic violence this year alone, the United Nations estimates.

But other officials give warning that the total could be far larger.

“The numbers of children taken over the years could go into thousands,” said Kuol Manyang, the governor of Jonglei, one of the hardest-hit areas. “Often there are over 200 children abducted every year.”

Boys are stolen to herd the cattle, while girls are valuable for the future dowry of cows they will earn, the communities say.

Some grieving parents even fear that the gunmen might include their own children, snatched years earlier and now used as expendable foot soldiers.

“Sometimes, when they attack us, we wonder. Are our sons among those who come to fight us now?” asked Mary Ojulo, a mother in Pochalla, a simple settlement of thatched huts on Sudan’s eastern border with Ethiopia.

The civil war ended in January 2005, but two decades of conflict bequeathed a legacy of bitter ethnic divisions between those who fought for the south’s splintered rebel factions, and those used as proxy militiamen by the north.

Two million people died and four million were left homeless in a conflict that shattered traditional hierarchies.

“The chiefs are not being respected by the young,” said Manyang, who controls a region the size of Austria and Switzerland combined, but where the few dirt roads are closed for much of the year because of heavy rains.

“Most people are armed… they have few jobs, but don’t want to go back to the old way of life.”

However, the young men who grew up in conflict still want the herds of cattle they need for their marriage dowry.

“If you don’t have cattle you can’t marry, and the amount the families demand has been growing higher since the war ended,” said Othow Okoti, a youth leader in Pochalla.

“So the easy way is to abduct children, then sell them on for cows,” he added, shaking his head in disgust.

Authorities recently freed 29 children and jailed four men for abducting them.

“I was forced to work with the cattle for four months,” said Omot Ochalla, a 12-year-old boy grabbed in a cross-border raid in the Gambella region of Ethiopia.

“I was not treated well,” he added quietly, now safe in a child trauma centre in Juba, the capital of semi-autonomous south Sudan, waiting with others for their families to be traced.

Often they are too young to tell authorities where they have come from, hampering efforts to send them home.

“These processes take time – to track and trace the families,” said Hilde Johnson, deputy executive director of the UN Children’s Fund.

Some people accuse the Murle tribe of leading the abductions, claiming that members of the warlike but marginalised group are infertile because of sexually transmitted diseases, a myth based on ignorance and fear rather than evidence.

But officials gave warning that the practice is spreading to other groups.

“The Nuer are now taking the children of the Murle, because they think that will make the Murle release their children back,” said Manyang.

“We are working to stop this, and we will launch a disarmament campaign to take the guns out of the hands of the people.”

Many fear for the future, with security concerns before elections next April and a referendum for the south’s potential full independence slated for January 2011.

Some accuse former civil war enemies in the north of destabilising the south by renewing support for proxy militias and provoking existing ethnic divisions, claims that are dismissed by the Khartoum government.

More than 2,000 people have died and 250,000 have been displaced in inter-tribal violence across the south this year, according to the United Nations.

It is a higher rate of violent deaths than in Sudan’s war-torn western region of Darfur.

“We have survived war and hunger for many, many years,” Mary Ojulo said. “But taking the children is the worst thing someone can do.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/expat/expatnews/6751222/The-child-snatchers-of-southern-Sudan.html

130 Doctors Without Borders Staff Disappear in South Sudan

Posted: January 3, 2012 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan
Tags:

Medical staff flee South Sudan clinic attacked by armed youths.
Andrew Meldrum, January 3, 2012 18:24
South sudan boy 2011 10 13

Amid the joy of South Sudan’s independence, Sudanese within Bashir’s reach still suffer. (Ashraf Shazly/AFP/Getty Images)

Doctors Without Borders goes where others don’t. And that often gets its staff in trouble.

The doctors and medics of the group, also known by their French name, Medecins Sans Frontieres, go to centers of conflict where most other medical teams do not. And that means they are often in danger.

On December 29, two staff members were killed in Somalia.

The latest news from South Sudan is especially worrying. Some 130 staff at the Doctors Without Borders clinic in Pibor, South Sudan, are missing, according to a statement from the group.

Renewed ethnic violence in Jonglei State, South Sudan, has forced thousands offamilies to flee into the bush. Two Doctors Without Borders medical facilities have been targeted and the independent medical humanitarian organization has been forced to temporarily suspend its much needed medical activities in Pibor County.

Doctors and nurses had to evacuate a hospital in the town of Pibor and two outreach clinics as a column of 6,000 armed youths from the Lou Nuer tribe descended on the town in pursuit of a rival tribe, the Murle, according to the Telegraph. The hospital was reportedly torched by the attacking forces.

The Lou Nuer and Murle are in conflict, with each accusing the other of stealing cattle and killing tribal members. Neither UN peacekeepers nor the South Sudan army were able to stop the attack on Pibor.

“Thousands of people have fled for their lives in Lekongole and Pibor in the last week and are now hiding in the bush, frightened for their lives,” said Parthesarathy Rajendran, DWB head of mission in South Sudan. “They fled in haste and have no food or water, some of them doubtless carrying wounds or injuries, and now they are on their own, hiding, beyond the reach of humanitarian assistance.”

An estimated 150 people were killed, according to the United Nations, but now the invading band has gone back to their home areas, according to the BBC. However, the thousands who fled the area, including the medical staff, are still missing and believed to be hiding the the bush.

The village of Lekongole has been raised to the ground and an DWB team that assessed the situation in Pibor on Dec. 28 described it as a ghost town, virtually everyone having fled into the surrounding country. While the people are hidden in the bush, we cannot reach them to clean and dress wounds, treat diseases and provide general primary healthcare. The longer they are in the bush, the more serious it will become for people who are injured or sick.

During the violence, two of DWB’s medical facilities were looted and damaged; the clinic in the village of Lekongole on Dec. 27, and the small hospital in the town of Pibor on Dec. 31.

A third clinic in the nearby village of Gumruk has not been affected, according to the group. These three medical facilities are the only healthcare available for the 160,000 people in Pibor County. The nearest alternative medical facility is more than 50 miles away.

Doctors Without Borders condemns “in the most serious terms the targeting of neutral and impartial medical facilities.” The organization has provided neutral medical aid in South Sudan for the last three decades, working in many different communities in the country, treating anyone who needs medical care irrespective of their ethnicity, religion or political affiliation. Yet besides the two recent incidents, in August last year, DWB’s medical facilities in Pieri, further north in Jonglei State, were also looted and burned.

Ten DWB international staff were relocated to Juba on Dec. 23, just before the latest violence erupted, and the group’s 156 locally hired staff were strongly advised to leave their town and seek refuge in the area.

Although DWB has established contact with a few of them, many cannot be contacted as they have taken flight along with their families and neighbors. Their precise whereabouts are unknown and DWB is deeply concerned about their safety.

DWB is ready to return and recommence providing emergency care as soon as possible.

“There are several crisis situations evolving in different parts of South Sudan right now,” adds Rajendran. “Our medical teams are also currently responding to the crisis of refugees fleeing conflict in neighbouring Sudan. These are staunch reminders that despite independence, acute emergencies are still all too present in South Sudan and the capacity for emergency humanitarian response remains an absolute priority.”

According to its statements, Doctors Without Borders started working in Sudan in 1978 and begin activities in the area that is now South Sudan in 1983. DWB works in 8 of 10 states in South Sudan today, providing healthcare in 15 projects via roughly 2,500 national staff and 200 international staff.

DWB and its clinics serve a variety of communities, which offer free care and are open to all. In 2010 DWB teams across the country carried out 588,000 outpatient consultations, treated 37,000 people with malaria, delivered 20,000 babies, cared for 18,000 hospitalized patients, and cured almost 26,000 malnourished children under 5 years old.

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/africa-emerges/south-sudan-news-130-doctors-without-borders-staff-missin

130 Doctors Without Borders staff disappear in Sudan

Sudan ethnic cleansing in AbyeiIn this photo provided by the United Nations Mission in Sudan (UNMIS), unidentified armed uniformed men walk past the burning huts of businesses and homesteads in the center of Abyei town, near South Sudan, Saturday, May 28, 2011. Despite achieving independence late last year, South Sudan has consistently stayed violent.(Credit: AP Photo/UNMIS, Stuart Price)

This story originally appeared on Global Post, and was written by Andrew Meldrum

Doctors Without Borders goes where others don’t. And that often gets its staff in trouble.

The doctors and medics of the group, also known by their French name, Medecins Sans Frontieres, go to centers of conflict where most other medical teams do not. And that means they are often in danger.

On December 29, two staff members were killed in Somalia.

The latest news from South Sudan is especially worrying. Some 130 staff at the Doctors Without Borders clinic in Pibor, South Sudan, are missing, according to a statement from the group.

Renewed ethnic violence in Jonglei State, South Sudan, has forced thousands of families to flee into the bush. Two Doctors Without Borders medical facilities have been targeted and the independent medical humanitarian organization has been forced to temporarily suspend its much needed medical activities in Pibor County.

Doctors and nurses had to evacuate a hospital in the town of Pibor and two outreach clinics as a column of 6,000 armed youths from the Lou Nuer tribe descended on the town in pursuit of a rival tribe, the Murle, according to the Telegraph. The hospital was reportedly torched by the attacking forces.

The Lou Nuer and Murle are in conflict, with each accusing the other of stealing cattle and killing tribal members. Neither UN peacekeepers nor the South Sudan army were able to stop the attack on Pibor.

“Thousands of people have fled for their lives in Lekongole and Pibor in the last week and are now hiding in the bush, frightened for their lives,” said Parthesarathy Rajendran, DWB head of mission in South Sudan. “They fled in haste and have no food or water, some of them doubtless carrying wounds or injuries, and now they are on their own, hiding, beyond the reach of humanitarian assistance.”

An estimated 150 people were killed, according to the United Nations, but now the invading band has gone back to their home areas, according to the BBC. However, the thousands who fled the area, including the medical staff, are still missing and believed to be hiding the the bush.

The village of Lekongole has been raised to the ground and an MSF team that assessed the situation in Pibor on 28th December described it as a ghost town, virtually everyone having fled into the surrounding country. While the people are hidden in the bush, we cannot reach them to clean and dress wounds, treat diseases and provide general primary healthcare. The longer they are in the bush, the more serious it will become for people who are injured or sick.

During the violence, two of MSF’s medical facilities were looted and damaged; the clinic in the village of Lekongole on 27 December, and the small hospital in the town of Pibor on 31 December.

A third MSF clinic in the nearby village of Gumruk has not to our knowledge been affected. These three medical facilities are the only healthcare available for the 160,000 people in Pibor County. The nearest alternative medical facility is further than 100 km.

DOCTORS WITHOUT BORDERS PRESS RELEASE

Doctors Without Borders condemns “in the most serious terms the targeting of neutral and impartial medical facilities.” The organization has provided neutral medical aid in South Sudan for the last three decades, working in many different communities in the country, treating anyone who needs medical care irrespective of their ethnicity, religion or political affiliation. Yet besides the two recent incidents, in August last year, DWB’s medical facilities in Pieri, further north in Jonglei State, were also looted and burned.

Ten DWB international staff were relocated to Juba on Dec. 23, just before the latest violence erupted, and the group’s 156 locally hired staff were strongly advised to leave their town and seek refuge in the area.

Although DWB has established contact with a few of them, many cannot be contacted as they have taken flight along with their families and neighbors. Their precise whereabouts are unknown and DWB is deeply concerned about their safety.

DWB is ready to return and recommence providing emergency care as soon as possible.

“There are several crisis situations evolving in different parts of South Sudan right now,” adds Rajendran. “Our medical teams are also currently responding to the crisis of refugees fleeing conflict in neighbouring Sudan. These are staunch reminders that despite independence, acute emergencies are still all too present in South Sudan and the capacity for emergency humanitarian response remains an absolute priority.”

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503543_162-57351744-503543/130-doctors-without-borders-staff-disappear-in-sudan/

South Sudanese ‘massacred’ after fleeing Pibor

Posted: January 3, 2012 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

Scores of people have been slaughtered after fleeing attacks by fighters from a rival ethnic group in South Sudan, according to numerous reports.

John Boloch of South Sudan’s Peace and Reconciliation Commission said at least 150 people, mostly women and children, had been killed over the past two days.

Another woman told the BBC that 20 of her relatives had been shot dead.

Some 6,000 fighters from the Lou Nuer ethnic group have been pursuing members of the rival Murle community.

This is the latest round in a cycle of violence which has lasted several months – in one incident last year some 600 ethnic Lou Nuer were killed.

The clashes began as cattle raids but have spiralled out of control.

The UN and South Sudan’s army have sent reinforcements to the town of Pibor, which was attacked on Saturday, but they are heavily outnumbered and wary of being seen as favouring one community over another.

Politicians ‘inciting violence’

BBC East Africa correspondent Will Ross says the area is so remote and dangerous it may be days until we get a real picture of the extent of the killings in South Sudan’s Jonglei State.

The tens of thousands of displaced civilians are getting absolutely no help or protection, he says.

image of Will RossWill RossEast Africa correspondent

Today the tears are being shed by the Murle. Rewind to August 2011 and the pain was being felt by the Luo Nuer when 600 of their people were killed, almost 1,000 injured and an estimated 40,000 cattle taken by the Murle.

The United Nations and the army of South Sudan are both facing criticism for not doing more to protect the civilians. They have done very little except to protect the government buildings in the centre of Pibor and to call on people to flee.

Even if they had the capacity and the desire to act, they would be lambasted by one side if they stepped in now.

A group calling itself the Lou Nuer Youth stated it would not tolerate the government’s intervention to protect the life of Murle civilians while it said its own children were at risk of attack.

It may be days before we get a true picture of the extent of the current killings but once again it is clear most of the victims are women and children – the men run off and prepare for yet another fight.

Mr Boloch, from the Murle community, said people who had fled Pibor had since been hunted down and killed near the River Kengen, south-east of Pibor.

“Children and women were massacred in that area – it was yesterday on the 2nd [of January], up to the 3rd,” he told Sudan Catholic Radio News.

He accused local politicians of exacerbating the long-standing rivalries for their own ends and also asked why UN peacekeepers and the army were protecting government buildings in Pibor, rather than people.

“If the politicians are not refraining themselves from inciting civilians… there is no way of having peace in Jonglei state,” he said.

He said that some of those taking part in the attacks were “young boys”.

Another woman was in tears as she told the BBC that her mother had called to say that 20 family members had been shot dead on Monday – all women and children.

“They had fled Pibor before the fighters reached there. They were hiding about three hours’ walk away by the River Kengen,” she said.

“They had nothing to do with the earlier attacks on the Lou Nuer – they were innocent. Some of them had come from other parts of South Sudan for Christmas.”

There are also reports that many people may have drowned in a river as they fled the attacks.

map

South Sudan is one of the world’s poorest regions – it gained independence from Sudan in July 2011 and has hardly any roads, railways, schools or clinics following two decades of conflict, which have left it awash with weapons.

South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir has called on the Lou Nuer to stop their advance and return to their traditional areas.

The government said it was deploying more troops and an additional 2,000 police to Pibor.

The Lou Nuer fighters arrived in Pibor on Saturday after marching through Jonglei state in recent weeks, setting fire to homes and seizing livestock.

The entire town of Lukangol was burnt to the ground last week. About 20,000 civilians managed to flee before the attack, but dozens were killed on both sides.

The governor of Jonglei state and the vice-president of South Sudan have been trying to mediate between the rival ethnic groups.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16394664

150 children lose parents in South Sudan violence

Posted: January 3, 2012 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

By JASON STRAZIUSO, Associated Press 

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Red Cross volunteers are trying to reconnect 150 young children with their missing parents after tens of thousands of residents of South Sudan ran into the bush while fleeing a massive wave of tribe-on-tribe violence, an official said Tuesday.

Many of those parents, though, are feared to be dead.

Violence broke out late last month between two South Sudanese tribes in the town of Pibor, sending tens of thousands of residents into the surrounding countryside. A death toll is not known because officials cannot gain safe access to the region. One community leader believes the toll is in the hundreds.

Save The Children said Tuesday that up to 25,000 women and children fled the violence and are living in the bush. The U.N. reported last week that 6,000 armed men were marching on Pibor.

“Children in the area already live in continual fear of violence and are often abducted in raids. If fighting continues thousands more could be killed, maimed, abducted or recruited to fight,” the group said.

The U.N. Deputy Humanitarian Coordinator for South Sudan estimated Tuesday that the death toll could be in the hundreds.

Speaking via video link from South Sudan’s capital, Juba, Lise Grande said she saw five corpses outside of Pibor.

“The situation on the ground now, in humanitarian terms, is grim,” Grande said. “Because people fled town, they didn’t take anything with them. They’ve been in the bush for up to a week. They haven’t had food, they haven’t had access to clean water, in a number of cases their people are wounded.”

She said the South Sudan government had promised to reinforce troops with 3,000 infantry soldiers 800 police officers who were beginning to arrive.

David Gai, who works with the Red Cross in South Sudan, said the situation in Pibor has stabilized, and that several hundred people have returned to the town, but that about 150 children who were separated from their families in the mad scramble now cannot find their parents.

The youngest of the children is 6 months old, he said, and was found lying under a tree. Most are aged from 1 to 7 years old.

“It is not known if their parents are killed or lost during the attack. Our volunteers are trying to register them now,” Gai said, adding later: “What we assume now is that some of the parents are not alive, some of them are killed.”

Doctors Without Borders said Tuesday that two of its medical facilities were targeted during the violence and that the group had to suspend medical services in the region.

“Thousands of people have fled for their lives in Lekongole and Pibor in the last week and are now hiding in the bush, frightened for their lives,” said Parthesarathy Rajendran, the group’s head of mission in South Sudan. “They fled in haste and have no food or water, some of them doubtless carrying wounds or injuries, and now they are on their own, hiding, beyond the reach of humanitarian assistance.”

Doctors Without Borders said the village of Lekongole was razed to the ground, and that personnel who were in Pibor on Dec. 28 described it as a “ghost town.”

Columns of fighters from the Lou Nuer ethnic group marched into Pibor to target the Murle community, two tribes that have traded violent attacks over the last several years that have killed thousands. Much of the communities’ animosity stems from cattle raiding attacks.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon spoke with the South Sudan President Salva Kiir on Monday about the violence.

South Sudan fought a decades-long civil war with northern neighbor Sudan, a war that culminated in a 2005 peace deal that saw the partitioning of Sudan and the birth of South Sudan last July. The new border between the two countries remains tense, with sporadic cross-border attacks taking place. But the violence between the Lou Nuer and the Murle inside South Sudan is a reminder of the challenges the world’s newest country faces inside its own borders.

Mary Boyoi Gola, a representative of the Murle community on a team of peace negotiators, told The Associated Press she believes up to 20 of her family members were killed during the Pibor violence. Women and children who fled Pibor went to a river called the Kangen. Gola said she was told that the Lou Nuer carried out a massacre there, killing hundreds of Merle trapped by the river’s boundary.

Gai, of the Red Cross, said his group’s information is that 20,000 or more women and children fled to the river, because it is the only place to get drinking water. He said he has heard reports of mass violence similar to what Gola has been told, but that “it is very difficult for us to verify.”

Gola is trying to raise awareness of the violence around Pibor, and she said she fears not enough is being done. The U.N. sent a battalion of peacekeepers to Pibor last week, and South Sudan sent in several thousand troops. But the security reinforcements may have come too late for many, Gola fears.

“There was no one paying attention in Pibor,” she said.

Associated Press Writer Michael Astor contributed to this report from the United Nations.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5ioHiGy5Zr1Azdpb6Yy8YQPHWHdfg?docId=459f638c85134de4910cb4309ea22fa7

Darfur, Nuba Mountain and Blue Nile: U.S. Sudan Policy Is “Killing Us”

Posted: January 3, 2012 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

At 3 a.m., I received an email from my colleague and dear friend, Mohamed. Usually calm and measured in his communication, Mohamed raged in his email against the Obama administration and its Sudan envoy, Princeton Lyman, for their complicity in supporting the brutal regime of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, indicted by the International Criminal Court for genocide and crimes against humanity in Darfur. The subject line of the email was “U.S. Sudan policy is killing us.”

Now living in the United States, Mohamed is from the village of Umbarow in Darfur. Members of Mohamed’s family were killed in the Darfur genocide. His village of Umbarrow was burned and destroyed by the government of Sudan and its proxy militia, the Janjaweed. His mother and siblings still live in Darfur.

In Mohamed’s homeland, al-Bashir and his National Congress Party are the architects of an ongoing government-sponsored genocide that has spanned more than two decades and resulted in the death and displacement of millions of people. Its targets have included the tribes of Darfur, South Kordofan, Blue Nile, Nubian North, Beja East, and South Sudan. Currently, the situation is particularly dire throughout South Kordofan and Blue Nile where government-sponsored aerial attacks are accompanied by the denial of access to vital humanitarian aid for hundreds of thousands of people.

“Sometimes I just wonder if the president and men and women around him are made of stone. Or if they have lost that moral compass inside their hearts,” Mohamed wrote. “There will be NO peace with al-Bashir and his regime in power.”

While the United States has recently condoned the ouster of brutal dictators in Libya and Syria, and supported opposition groups in those countries, it has adamantly refused to take sides in Sudan. Recently, the U.S. Special Envoy to Sudan Princeton Lyman gave an interview to the London-based Arabic newspaper Asharq Al-Awsat, where the special envoy said the following:

“Frankly, we do not want to see the ouster of the [Sudanese] regime, nor regime change. We want to see the regime carrying out reform via constitutional democratic measures.”

However, with a decades long track record of genocide, any cursory review of the facts makes abundantly clear that Sudan’s regime has no intention of reforming itself by democratic measures. Sudan’s dubious track record also includes innumerable broken commitments made at countless negotiating tables.

“Why are the lives of our loved ones expendable in exchange for appeasement of a genocidal regime???!!” Mohamed wrote. “Could somebody scream in the ears of Ambassador Lyman that the U.S. Sudan policy is NOT working for the oppressed but working for the oppressor? The regime in Khartoum is broken beyond repair or reform.”

In his email, Mohamed cites a short list of atrocities committed by the government of Sudan in just the past two weeks:

  • In Darfur: Intensive areal bombings carried out in North and South Darfur, especially in the areas of Abu Karinka and Jawgan. In Al Lait Jar Al Nabi locality, in North Darfur, bordering Adila and Ed Daein in South Darfur, bombing was reported on December 29 from morning until midday. Air strikes were also reported last week killing three members of one family.
  • In Blue Nile: On December 27, air strikes and heavy artillery were reported in Bao locality, Blue Nile state, killing 84 residents including 24 children.
  • In South Kordofan: There are reports that the Sudanese air force bombed areas south west of Dilling county in South Kordofan on December 22.
  • In South Sudan: On December 29, at least 17 people, mostly civilians, were killed in Western Bahr el Ghazal State, following an aerial attack allegedly carried out by Sudan.

For those who follow events in Sudan, the list above is eerily similar to those of so many other weeks. Yet there continues to be no action taken by the U.S. government or the international community to prevent more deaths, displacement and starvation. There has also been very little coverage by the mainstream media. Contrast this situation with Syria where the U.S. is weighing options for increasing pressure on the Assad regime and the media is rightly giving the situation front page coverage.

Mohamed works tirelessly in efforts to bring an end to the years of genocide in Sudan in addition to his demanding full-time job. He is one of the co-founders of Act for Sudan, a bipartisan, multi-faith, alliance of 55 American and Sudanese advocacy organizations across the country who advocate for an end to genocide and mass atrocities in Sudan.

Recently, Act for Sudan coordinated an open letter to President Obama signed by 66 organizations asking the United States to urgently address civilian protection and humanitarian assistance. It also worked together with international organizations to deliver a petition to Secretary General Ban Ki Moon and members of the U.N. Security Council, and issued a questionnaire to Republican president candidates regarding their proposed Sudan policy if elected.

Still, in spite of this dedicated activism, the Obama administration seems blind and deaf to the ongoing genocide in Sudan. In Mohamed’s words, “It is morally wrong to keep millions of Darfuris in the IDP camps for almost a decade, Nuba Mountain people trapped in the caves, Blue Nile people refugees in another country (Ethiopia) away from their homes. We see clearly this administration has made its choice. Yet history is taking notice.”

Follow Susan Morgan on Twitter: www.twitter.com/susanmorgan


Thousands of youths from a South Sudanese ethnic group which attacked a rival community, reportedly killing at least 150 people, have been repelled by government troops, the UN says.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bemR9srSQVI

The UN’s humanitarian co-ordinator in the region, Lise Grande, says 6,000 members of the Lou Nuer ethnic group have left the besieged town of Pibor.

The clashes took place between the Lou Nuer and their rivals, the Murle.

The fighting follows long-running disputes over cattle raids.

As well as those killed, tens of thousands have been displaced in the violence, according to the South Sudan government.

“Pibor is under the full control of the government, and the Lou Nuer have been ordered to return to their homes, and they are starting to do so,” Information Minister Barnaba Marial Benjamin said.

Ms Grande said a decisive event took place on Monday: government troops backed by UN forces repelled an attack on Pibor in Jonglei state by the Lou Nuer ethnic group; shortly after that, she said, the Lou Nuer began to leave the area.

The Lou Nuer had launched an offensive on their rivals from the Murle ethnic group last week, accusing them of stealing cattle.

Ms Grande said damage to Pibor was limited.

However, she said the humanitarian situation for the tens of thousands of people who fled the violence was grim, with the UN and other agencies now organising an emergency programme to help them.

Ms Grande said the government was beginning to deploy 3,000 extra soldiers and 800 police officers to the area.

She also said the Lou Nuer took a lot of cattle with them.

Last August, it was the Murle who attacked them and raided their herds.

Cattle vendettas are common in South Sudan, as are other ethnic and tribal clashes: the UN says some 350,000 people were displaced because of intercommunal violence last year, says the BBC’s Barbara Plett at the United Nations.

This presents a major challenge to the government of the newly independent state, which also faces cross-border tensions with its northern neighbour Sudan.

The clashes began as cattle raids, but have spiralled out of control.

Town burnt

South Sudan is one of the world’s poorest regions – it gained independence from Sudan in July 2011 and has hardly any roads, railways, schools or clinics following two decades of conflict, which have left it awash with weapons.

South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir had called on the Lou Nuer to stop their advance and return to their traditional areas.

The Lou Nuer fighters arrived in Pibor on Saturday after marching through Jonglei state in recent weeks, setting fire to homes and seizing livestock.

The entire town of Lukangol was burnt to the ground last week. About 20,000 civilians managed to flee before the attack, but dozens were killed on both sides.

The governor of Jonglei state and the vice-president of South Sudan have been trying to mediate between the rival ethnic groups.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16403083

South Sudan violence: Armed youths return home, says UN
BBC News
Thousands of youths from a South Sudanese ethnic group which attacked a rival community, reportedly killing at least 150 people, have been repelled by government troops, the UN says. The UN’s humanitarian co-ordinator in the region, Lise Grande, 

Shell eyes possible South Sudan opportunities
London South East
By Tom Bergin al opportunities in South Sudan, which last July broke away from Khartoum, taking with it two-thirds of Sudan’s 500000 barrels per day of oil production. ‘We continuously review potential business opportunities around the world. 

South Sudanese ‘massacred’ after fleeing Pibor
BBC News
Scores of people have been slaughtered after fleeing attacks by fighters from a rival ethnic group in South Sudan, according to numerous reports. John Boloch of the local Peace and Reconciliation Commission said at least 150 people, mostly women and 

South Sudan: Undersecretary of Culture Ministry Narrates His Ordeal in Wau
AllAfrica.com
Here is South Sudan, our new country, the one we could not wait to gain independence, is now where such actions have become so common place. What happened to the good old system, where a soldier, once having witnessed a suspicious behavior on the part 

South Sudan: Open Letter to Kuol Manyang Juuk Governor of Jonglei State
AllAfrica.com
By Nyelwok Jijio From Murle Community My cordial greeting to you and to your family members particularly the Bor community at large. I hope that the Almighty Father is drawing you to his nearest by giving enough protection in His name. 

South Sudan: MP Accuses Murle of Attacking Duk County
AllAfrica.com
Juba — A surprise attack was launched by Murle cattle raiders yesterday in Duk County in Jonglei State amid continuous fighting in their land by Lou-Nuer youth. A Member of Parliament in the National Legislative Assembly representing Duk County Philip 

South Sudan: Akobo Comes Under Attack From Unknown Gunmen – Official
AllAfrica.com
Juba — The Commissioner of Akobo County of Jonglei State Goi Jok Yol told The Citizen yesterday that his county was attacked by unknown heavily armed gunmen who killed at least five people which included two men, two women and one child and rustled 

South Sudan: Faith Based Group Calls for Peace, Reconciliation
AllAfrica.com
Cindut expressed that the year 2011 passed with good and bad memories pointing that the achievement of referendum in which South Sudanese overwhelmingly voted with 98.83% which paved the way for independence celebrated last year. 

150 children lose parents in South Sudan violence
The Associated Press
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Red Cross volunteers are trying to reconnect 150 young children with their missing parents after tens of thousands of residents of South Sudan ran into the bush while fleeing a massive wave of tribe-on-tribe violence, 

South Sudan repays Israel’s favour
The Australian
IT’S not every day the leader of a new country makes his first foreign voyage to Jerusalem, besieged capital of Israel, but President Salva Kiir of South Sudan, accompanied by his foreign and defence ministers, did just that. 

South Sudan: New Year Must Bring Us Peace
AllAfrica.com
In Juba and reportedly in other major towns of South Sudan’s ten states, this particular night seemed to be a blessed one because people of all walks of life prepared for it and waited patiently some even waited impatiently for the change to occur so 

South Sudan flashpoint town under government control
AngolaPress
of villagers fled into the bush to escape a marauding militia army from a rival tribe, officials said Tuesday. worst flare-up in a dispute that has left more than 1000 dead in recent months and threatened to destabilise the world’s newest country. 

South Sudan: The South Sudan Business Union Activities Are Appreciated
AllAfrica.com
The South Sudan Business Union is one of the South Sudan civil society’s organizations which was established by the South Sudanese businessmen and businesswomen and its head office is in Juba with branches in the states of the country. 

Scores feared dead in South Sudan tribal clashes
AFP
Scores of people are feared dead after tribal clashes in South Sudan over the weekend. A column of some 6000 armed youths from the Lou Nuer tribe marched on the remote town of Pibor in troubled Jonglei state, home to the rival Murle people, 

US Sudan Policy Is “Killing Us”
Huffington Post
Its targets have included the tribes of Darfur, South Kordofan, Blue Nile, Nubian North, Beja East, andSouth Sudan. Currently, the situation is particularly dire throughout South Kordofan and Blue Nile where government-sponsored aerial attacks are 

Shell eyes possible South Sudan opportunities
London South East
By Tom Bergin al opportunities in South Sudan, which last July broke away from Khartoum, taking with it two-thirds of Sudan’s 500000 barrels per day of oil production. ‘We continuously review potential business opportunities around the world. 

INTERVIEW: Doctors concerned for South Sudanese hiding in the bush
Monsters and Critics.com
By Shabtai Gold Jan 3, 2012, 18:18 GMT Johannesburg/Juba – Ongoing inter-ethnic clashes inSouth Sudan have directly hit the medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF), a senior regional staff member told German Press Agency dpa. 


AFP) –

JUBA — South Sudan’s army is in “full control” of a flashpoint town, after thousands of villagers fled into the bush to escape a marauding militia army from a rival tribe, officials said Tuesday.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hjjPEESWmXc&feature=endscreen&NR=1

A column of some 6,000 armed youths from the Lou Nuer tribe marched on the remote town of Pibor in troubled Jonglei state, home to the rival Murle people, who they blame for cattle raiding and have vowed to exterminate.

“Pibor is under the full control of the government, and the Lou Nuer have been ordered to return to their homes, and they are starting to do so,” Information Minister Barnaba Marial Benjamin said.

Gunmen burned thatched huts and looted a hospital run by Doctors Without Borders in the worst flare-up in a dispute that has left more than 1,000 dead in recent months and threatened to destabilise the world’s newest country.

The government and the United Nations — which has warned the violence could lead to a “major tragedy” — were beefing up their forces in the area.

Lise Grande, the UN humanitarian coordinator for South Sudan, said “probably well over twenty thousand” people had fled into the bush.

Ethnic violence, cattle raids and reprisal attacks in the vast eastern state left over 1,100 people dead and forced some 63,000 from their homes last year, according to UN reports based on local authorities and assessment teams.

Tit-for-tat cattle raiding is common in a grossly underdeveloped region awash with guns and left in ruins by decades of war with northern Sudanese forces, who fuelled conflict by backing proxy militia forces across the south.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hjjPEESWmXc&feature=endscreen&NR=1

New South Sudan rebels vow to attack Juba within a month

separation

January 3, 2012 (LONDON) – South Sudan’s newest rebel movement has told Sudan Tribune that it plans attack the capital Juba within the month and denies it is backed by Khartoum.

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The distance between Renk, where the new rebels say they are based and South Sudan’s capital Juba is around 800km (Google Maps)

The leader of the South Sudan People Liberation Movement/Army (SSPLM/A), Tong Lual Ayat, claims to have a force of 5,000 soldiers and plans to double that figure with new recruits and defections from the South Sudanese military (SPLA).

Ayat, a former member of South Sudan’s ruling party – the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) – said that he had begun his rebellion because of the corrupt and ineffective way the country is being governed by President Salva Kiir.

South Sudan became independent in July 2011 under Kiir’s leadership, as part of a 2005 peace deal with north Sudan.

Like other rebellions in South Sudan the new group state corruption, bad governance and lack of human rights and freedoms as some of the reasons for their insurgency.

But in a departure from the aims of other rebels the SSPLM/A declared in its manifesto at the end of December that it wanted to South Sudan to revert being governed by Khartoum under a confederation.

However, following the “negative reactions” to the announcement the nascent movement scrapped the idea just days later.

The Unity and Jonglei state-based South Sudan Liberation Army (SSLA), the country’s most active rebel group, shortly after the original announcement said that they opposed confederation.

“The people of South Sudan voted overwhelmingly for separation and nobody can reverse that. The democratic choice of the people of South Sudan has to be respected” the SSLA’s Bapiny Monytuil told Sudan Tribune.

The SSLA warned Ayat that if he did not change his manifesto other southern rebels would not cooperate with him.

The hastily dropped proposal, Ayat said, was for the two Sudan’s to create a European or East African Community type system.

Ayat said that because of these concerns the article had been dropped and replaced with a statement calling for “regime change in Juba.”

“Any inconvenience caused by this article is sincerely regretted”, the group said in a 1 January press release.

In 2009 Ayat left the ruling SPLM and formed the United Democratic Party (UDP) but claims he was arrested for starting the new party and subsequently his party did not join the government after the 2010 elections.

In a email to Sudan Tribune on 1 January, Ayat said that South Sudanese were fed up with the current government and the country needed an alternative. The SSPLM/A’s planned attack on Juba will be called “Rescue South Sudan from Oppressors”, he said.

Ayat says that he has no connection with Khartoum and is trying to form a coalition with other rebel and opposition groups in South Sudan as well as encourage defections from the army.

Juba and Khartoum have routinely accused each other of backing the rebel groups in each others territory.

The new rebels claim to be based in Renk in Upper Nile state near the border with north Sudan.

Renk and Juba are at other ends of the country, with Juba close to the border with Uganda. The SSPLM/A would have to travel around 800km through difficult terrain to reach Juba.

Similar warnings, given by other rebel groups that they were going imminently attack and take control of major towns in South Sudan have, so far, not transpired.

(ST)

South Sudan flashpoint town under government control
AFP
JUBA — South Sudan’s army is in “full control” of a flashpoint town, after thousands of villagers fled into the bush to escape a marauding militia army from a rival tribe, officials said Tuesday. A column of some 6000 armed youths from the Lou Nuer

South Sudan: Communal Wars – Their Causes and Resolution Mechanisms
AllAfrica.com
These wars are currently taking place in many parts of South Sudan, particularly in Warrap, Lakes and Jonglei states. Two questions arise; what are their causes? How can they be resolved? The causes of communal wars can be simply stated: disputes

New South Sudan rebels vow to attack Juba within a month
Sudan Tribune
January 3, 2012 (LONDON) – South Sudan’s newest rebel movement has told Sudan Tribune that it plans attack the capital Juba within the month and denies it is backed by Khartoum. The leader of the South Sudan People Liberation Movement/Army (SSPLM/A),

South Sudan: Civilians Escape Ex-Militia Fire in Mapel
AllAfrica.com
Gadet responded to President Kiir’s amnesty to the South Sudan rebel forces during the country’s declaration of independence on 9th July 2011 and returned to Juba last year in August while sending his forces to SPLA training camp in Mapel for

South Sudan: Jonglei Problem Is Influencing Other Disarmed and Peaceful States
AllAfrica.com
The disputes in Jonglei state seem to be nonstop and have outlaid the marks of setting the whole nation into several conflicts here and there. Some of the states with the disarmed communities are now rebuying guns for protecting themselves and cattle

Sudanese FM Says New Strategy To Be Adopted In Dealings With South Sudan
Bernama
KHARTOUM, Jan 3 (BERNAMA-NNN-SUNA) — Sudanese Foreign Minister Ali Karti says a new strategy will be adopted for dealing with the newly independent South Sudan State and that the policy will be exposed to a number of the state’s organs to agree about

Sudan…On the threshold of a difficult year
Al-Arabiya
The beginning of the year witnessed the division of the country after South Sudan voted to secede, in a referendum stipulated by the terms of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), signed by the al-Bashir regime and the Sudan People’s Liberation


The Sudanese Revolutionary Front
The High political Committee
December 21st, 2011
Dear Faroug Abu-Issa,
Chairman of the National Consensus Forces Council (NCF),
Ladies and Gentlemen members of the council and representatives of political parties, trade unions and civil society organizations,
Warm greetings,
We, in the High Political Committee of the Sudanese Revolutionary Front (SRF) are pleased to address you via this letter as a starter of a formal dialogue between two of the forces of the democratic change and as a continuation to the collective work of all forces of the Sudanese people that struggle for change and for the overthrow of the Salvation Regime by way of employing all possible array of struggles which were historically tested by the Sudanese people especially the civil peaceful Intifada and the popular armed struggle which has been invigorated by the sacrifices and blood of the sons and daughters of our people in towns and rural villages. The Sudanese people experience in October1964 and April 1985, demonstrated that the popular armed struggle have had supported and strengthened the civil and peaceful Intifada. As you might all know, the forces that make up the SRF, have popular base and supporters in towns and rural areas all over the Sudan, and we believe in the integration and convergence of all forms, methods and tools of popular struggle to overthrow the regime. We would like to take this opportunity to highly appreciate your commitment in upholding the banner of resistance against dictatorship and totalitarianism.
We need not to underline the importance of the watershed moment passing before our eyes which must be seized by our people to overthrow the regime whose sun has set and its strength has faded and became a voice from the past of dictatorship and totalitarianism. The regime is under siege by the anger and a curse of the people after it divided the country and insulted its citizens and was unable to provide decent living for them. This is happening in the Sudan while we are witnessing around us, starting with our close neighbors, people are in uprising and raising high the banners of freedom and democracy.
Ladies and gentlemen members of NCF,
Our country is witnessing a broad upsurge in the rural areas and towns, especially among the youths, women, and the marginalized in rural areas and the urban poor. The people in Sudan will neither forgive any reversal, confusion, distraction and divisiveness of the current course nor accept the dissipation of the potentiality of unifying the forces of change under whatever pretext. We would like to reiterate and emphasize the followings:
Firstly: The SRF is ready to work jointly with other political forces to reach a national consensus to overthrow the regime through the adoption of the dual approach of the popular uprising and the popular armed resistance in a complementary and harmonious manner. We must disregards calls for dialogue with the regime or for constitutional reforms as these calls are intended to infuse perplexity among the ranks of the opposition under the claim of exploring a third approach other than the one of overthrowing the regime. Thus, it is incumbent upon us all to put forward clear and unequivocal slogans about our ultimate goal of overthrowing the regime. To achieve that goal, you should continue your commitment to peaceful civil action and you will have our support and the effective participation of our supporters, and on the other hand, we will keep up our armed struggle without respite or truce or bilateral agreements which proved their failure.
Secondly: The SRF is a democratic organization with declared objectives of restructuring the Sudanese state and lays the foundation for a citizens’ based, democratic and social just State. Hence, all the talk about the racial and ethnic composition of SRF, in essence, is a racial and ethnic attitude in itself and an age-old ethnocentric bias and the Khartoum regime is grandest ethnically-based institution there is. Our people of Sudan way forward is to work jointly to lay the pillars of a national consensus and in that spirit we are addressing you today.
Thirdly: The continuation of the NCP regime in power will lead to further disintegration of the Sudan. The guarantee to the rest of Sudan unity lies in the removal of this regime instead of collaborating with it. It has been proven without doubt that the policies of the current regime divided the Islamic movement itself let alone the Sudan whose division is now an evident reality.
Fourthly: The establishment of a strategic and stable relation between the Sudan and the Republic of South Sudan will not be attainable without the overthrow of the NCP regime and the establishment of a democratic government whose interests prevail via peaceful coexistence with neighboring countries and the international community.
Fifthly: Please find enclosed all the documents that have been approved by members of SRF, and we look forward for a democratic dialogue that is mindful of the issues of the country and its citizens and lays the foundation for an agreement between the forces of change on the necessary arrangements pertaining to the post NCP era.
Sixthly: lastly, the SRF have already embarked in dialogue with significant political forces in Sudan, which have welcomed the formation of the SRF and expressed their wishes to join it which in turn strengthens and serves the interests of the forces of change. We are now on the threshold of convening the first national convention of the SRF which will be a historic and an important event for the struggle of the forces of change and the marginalized and the objective of restructuring the Sudan State power center. We would like to affirm here that our ultimate goal is not to reshuffle government positions based on the old system of rule, but to reach a consensus with other forces of change on how the country should be ruled according to a new national program for building the new Sudanese state, and restructuring it so that it serves the interests of the marginalized of all ethnicities especially the women.
With our utmost respect and appreciation.
The High Political Committee of the SRF
 
1. Dr. Al-Raih Mahmood Gouma
2. Abu-Algasim Imam
3. Ahmed Tugud Lisan
4. Yasir Arman