LSE academic describes Sudanese attack on South Sudan town

Posted: April 28, 2012 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in World
Tags: , ,

Syerramia Willoughby

LSE’s Matthew Le Riche is in Rubkona in South Sudan, which was under attack by Sudanese forces on Monday. He sent this report of the situation in the town. You may find some of the photos accompanying the report distressing.

Early on Monday morning, at least two Sudanese military jet fighters attacked the market in Rubkona near Bentiu, 80 kilometres from Heglig, depending on where you place the border it remains well inside South Sudan. At least one civilian, a young boy, was killed by one of two direct hits on the small shelter in which he was hiding. Other munitions hit a fuel store nearby and others fell into the river near the market, not far from the only bridge in the area.

Deputy Minister of Defence, Dr. Majak Agoot and Unity State Governor Taban Deng Gai surveying the aftermath of the attack in Rubkona Market. They paused where the young boy had died and said a prayer.

This blatant attack on civilians occured just days after the South Sudanese army agreed to withdraw from the disputed Heglig area in a ceasefire agreement compelled solely by international diplomatic pressure.

The Sudanese Armed Forces have once again launched an assault on civilians inside South Sudan. Reliable sources also indicated that throughout Sunday and at the same time as the jets attacked the market in Rubkona, a series of attacks upon South Sudanese army border defenses were repulsed.

Sudanese aircraft

Capturing and holding Heglig from the Sudanese army earlier this month came after a long string of similar indiscriminate attacks just as those experienced this morning by civilians in Rubkona. The South Sudanese army Chief of General Staff James Hoth Mai, Deputy Minister of Defence Majak Agoot and other leaders have all indicated that the original move into Heglig was for the purpose of preventing attacks by Sudanese forces on the people of South Sudan, what they clearly understand as an act of self-defence. In an interview General Mai indicated that ‘Khartoum has been using Heglig to terrorise our people, to attack our people, using proxy war with militias in the South … they attack us and then they run to Heglig.’

A casualty of the Sudanese attack on Rubkona

The capture of Heglig by the SPLA revealed Sudanese Armed Forces unwilling to fight for Bashir. Rather than stand and fight, the forces fled leaving equipment and arms behind for the SPLA to capture. This was made clear in video footage of the event acquired from the South Sudanese military.

The withdrawal, due to international pressure and efforts at conciliation on the part of the government of South Sudan, seems to have done little but to embolden President Bashir to continue attacking the South Sudanese, likely a part of a bid to cling to power in Khartoum.  Bashir and northern Sudanese forces are thus continuing to target civilians using high tech tools of war as the needless death of a young boy on Monday morning made so tragically clear.

http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/africaatlse/2012/04/24/lse-academic-describes-sudanese-attack-on-south-sudan-town/

Comments
  1. Captain says:

    hahaahhahahaa this website is sooooo damn funny ”The capture of Heglig by the SPLA revealed Sudanese Armed Forces unwilling to fight for Bashir.” The Sudanese army doesn’t fight for a man, the army fights for the nation. ”Rather than stand and fight, the forces fled leaving equipment and arms behind for the SPLA to capture” the forces where too little and totally outnumbered by that time when SPLA entered, they weren’t even a battalion they were a small border force. they had to flee innorder not to be captured, they fled and returned in a large number that crushed the SPLA in 10 days.

    ”The withdrawal, due to international pressure and efforts at conciliation on the part of the government of South Sudan” you have no evidence to say that you withdrew due to international pressure, on the 20th of April you said that you would withdraw in 3 days time, while on that same day, Sudanese army was inside Heglig oil field. SPLA was totally crushed and SPLA losses were over 1000 men while sudan lost less than a 100.

    and those 13 POW’s that you claimed captured during fighting, half of them weren’t even soldiers, you got them from Heglig hospital which was built for all the workers and security in the oilfield. so you never captured them during fighting. we captured over 50 SPLA soldiers and all of them claimed that they haven’t been fed for days and that they ran out of weapons.

    South Sudan never won, except the fact that they did occupy Heglig, the rest was all made up by salva kiir during and after the battle.

    Like

Leave a comment