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Fleeing South Sudan Violence, Scores Drown in Nile Fleeing Violence in South Sudan, Scores Drown in White Nile
(about 2 hours later)
NAIROBI, Kenya — Rebel forces in South Sudan attacked Malakal, the capital of the oil-rich state of Upper Nile, again on Tuesday, amid reports of a deadly ferry accident that claimed the lives of more than 200 people trying to flee sectarian fighting. NAIROBI, Kenya — It happened during a panic that has unfolded with frightening regularity in recent weeks. Fighters were advancing. Crowds of civilians fled to the river to escape the violence, rushing into barges to cross the White Nile. Amid the frenzy, officials said Tuesday, more than 200 people were killed when the ferry carrying them to safety went down.
Col. Philip Aguer, a spokesman for the South Sudanese military, said the people on board were all civilians, including women and children, who were trying to escape the advance on the town of Malakal. “The boat was overloaded,” Colonel Aguer said. The circumstances of the accident were not clear. After a month of fighting in South Sudan, nearly half a million people have fled their homes and thousands have been killed. Many have sought safety by crowding onto boats, with witnesses describing passengers being crushed or falling overboard and drowning in the rush to escape. But the recent accident, which officials said took place over the weekend, is the worst reported in the conflict.
Many people displaced by the fighting in South Sudan have sought safety by crowding onto barges and crossing the White Nile. In the rush to escape, witnesses have described how people have been crushed or fallen overboard and drowned, but the recent accident is the worst reported yet. All of the people killed, possibly as many as 300, were civilians, including women and children abandoning the town of Malakal, said Col. Philip Aguer, a spokesman for the South Sudanese military. “The boat was overloaded,” he said.
Malakal has already traded hands twice in the conflict, with the rebels capturing the strategic city early in the conflict, then retreating in the face of a government assault in late December. The Right Rev. Hilary Garang Deng, the Episcopal bishop of Malakal, said he had received reports of the panic onshore, with people “running for their lives, fearing because the rebels were advancing.” Bishop Deng, who is presently in Juba, the capital, said there was little concrete information on the disaster because phone service in the city was cut.
“Today there is fighting anew” in and around Malakal, said Toby Lanzer, the United Nations humanitarian coordinator for South Sudan, in a message on Twitter on Tuesday. He said the number of civilians seeking protection at the United Nations base near there had “soared from 10,000 to 19,000.” Rebel forces attacked Malakal, the capital of the oil-rich state of Upper Nile, once again on Tuesday, officials said. The city has already traded hands twice in the conflict, with the rebels capturing it, then retreating in the face of a government assault in late December. According to Doctors Without Borders, on Sunday 94 gunshot victims arrived by boat at a hospital in another city, wounded in the fighting on the front line outside Malakal.
The fighting was touched off by a political dispute between President Salva Kiir and his former vice president, Riek Machar. Mr. Kiir dismissed Mr. Machar along with the rest of his cabinet in July. “Today there is fighting anew” in and around Malakal, said Toby Lanzer, the United Nations humanitarian coordinator for South Sudan, in a message on Twitter on Tuesday. He said the number of civilians seeking protection at the United Nations base there had “soared from 10,000 to 19,000.” That number has now reached 20,000, according to Ariane Quentier at the United Nations Mission in South Sudan.
The United Nations said in late December that more than 1,000 people had been killed since fighting broke out on Dec. 15. The International Crisis Group said last week that the number of fatalities was approaching 10,000. The conflict in South Sudan stems from a political dispute between President Salva Kiir and his former vice president, Riek Machar. Mr. Kiir dismissed Mr. Machar along with the rest of his cabinet in July. Then fighting broke out on Dec. 15, after the president accused Mr. Machar of an attempted coup.
The humanitarian crisis continues to grow. According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, around 413,000 people are internally displaced and 66,500 are seeking refuge at United Nations bases around the country. More than 74,300 have already fled the country, with 4,000 to 5,000 arriving daily in neighboring Uganda alone, four out of five of them children. United Nations officials have said the death toll in the conflict has risen significantly since their estimate in late December that more than 1,000 people had been killed. The International Crisis Group said last week that the number of fatalities was approaching 10,000.
“We all assume that the humanitarian situation will get worse,” said Jose Barahona, country director in South Sudan for Oxfam. “There are new people displaced.” Access for humanitarian aid groups has been difficult in the rapidly shifting security situation. In places like Malakal, he said, it can be safe one day and dangerous the next, as offensives and counteroffensives take shape. The conflict looks increasingly like the all-out civil war that diplomats say they have been trying to prevent.
“Due to the uncertainty of military operations, we have been deploying and evacuating people the whole time,” said Mr. Barahona. “There are very few places in the country where we can actually go.” “If this isn’t civil war what is a civil war?” said Alex de Waal, the executive director of the World Peace Foundation at the Fletcher School at Tufts University. He said there were organized forces on both sides with clear command and control, both administering territory and both with political leadership.
The Satellite Sentinel Project, a nonprofit group, released satellite photographs showing homes destroyed in the town of Mayom, in Unity State, a region where there are large oil reserves. The satellite pictures also showed damage to oil storage tanks and manifolds in the state. In Jonglei State, the market in the capital, Bor, suffered significant damage, as did homes in nearby villages, many of which were burned to the ground. “It fits the definition in every textbook,” Mr. de Waal said.
At least three aid workers have been killed so far. Dozens of humanitarian aid compounds have been looted of supplies and dozens of their vehicles have been stolen. The humanitarian crisis continues to grow. According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, around 413,000 people are internally displaced and 66,500 are seeking refuge at United Nations bases around the country. More than 74,300 have already fled the country, with another 4,000 to 5,000 arriving daily in neighboring Uganda alone.
Although the United Nations has not officially raised its estimate of the death toll, the organization said in a statement on Sunday that interviews and investigations revealed “horrific allegations of atrocities by antigovernment forces against civilians and surrendering soldiers, including summary executions, torture, sexual violence and ethnically targeted killing.” “We all assume that the humanitarian situation will get worse,” said Jose Barahona, country director in South Sudan for Oxfam. Access for humanitarian aid groups has been difficult in the volatile situation. In places like Malakal, he said, it can be safe one day and dangerous the next, as offensives and counteroffensives take shape.
“Due to the uncertainty of military operations, we have been deploying and evacuating people the whole time,” Mr. Barahona said. “There are very few places in the country where we can actually go.”
The Satellite Sentinel Project, a nonprofit group, released satellite photographs showing homes destroyed in the town of Mayom, in Unity State, a region where there are large oil reserves. The satellite pictures also showed damage to oil storage tanks and manifolds in the state. In Jonglei State, the market in the capital of Bor suffered significant damage, as did homes in nearby villages, many of which were burned to the ground.
At least three aid workers have been killed so far. Dozens of humanitarian aid compounds have been looted of supplies and dozens of vehicles have been stolen.
In a statement on Sunday, the United Nations said interviews and investigations had revealed “horrific allegations of atrocities by anti-government forces against civilians and surrendering soldiers, including summary executions, torture, sexual violence and ethnically targeted killing.”
The United Nations mission said it “deplores these horrendous acts of violence and utter disregard for human life and dignity.”The United Nations mission said it “deplores these horrendous acts of violence and utter disregard for human life and dignity.”
Diplomats from across the region and around the world have urged, cajoled and begged the two sides to negotiate a cease-fire, thus far to no avail. Over the weekend, the United States special envoy, Donald Booth, met with Mr. Machar at an undisclosed location. But there has been no breakthrough. Diplomats from across the region and around the world have urged, threatened and begged the two sides to negotiate a cease-fire, to no avail. Over the weekend, the United States special envoy, Donald E. Booth, met with Mr. Machar at an undisclosed location. But there has been no breakthrough to end the fighting.
“They’re under enormous pressure for a cessation of hostilities and a release of the detainees,” said Mr. de Waal. “It’s always better to have people at the table because having them at the table means when the thinking does shift they’re there to make a deal.”