UN says kidnapping of 12 colleagues in S.Sudan possible war crime

Oct 30, 2015

The United Nations' chief in South Sudan called Friday for the immediate release of 12 colleagues seized by rebel forces, warning their capture was a possible war crime.

JUBA - The United Nations' chief in South Sudan called Friday for the immediate release of 12 colleagues seized by rebel forces, warning their capture was a possible war crime.

Around 100 rebel fighters, who have been battling the government for almost  two years of civil war, captured 30 members of the UN peacekeeping mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) on Monday.

While 18 Bangladeshi peacekeepers were later freed, 12 South Sudanese working for UNMISS are still being held. All were on a river barge carrying fuel for the UN mission.

"I am adamant that the taking of UNMISS personnel as hostages is equivalent to an attack on the UN," Ellen Margrethe Loj said Friday.

"Such attacks against UN peacekeepers and other personnel may constitute a war crime."

South Sudan's army on Thursday claimed the UN barges had supplied fuel and "logistic items" to rebel general Gabriel Tanginya, a powerful warlord in the oil-zone areas of Upper Nile.

But Loj rejected those accusations.

"All of the fuel cargo was intended for resupplying the UNMISS base," she said.

Some 12,500 peacekeepers are deployed in South Sudan, which has been wracked by conflict since December 2013.

Tens of thousands of people have been killed, and UN-backed experts have warned of the "concrete risk of famine" before the end of the year, if fighting continues and aid does not reach the hardest hit areas.

Both sides are accused of having perpetrated ethnic massacres, recruited and killed children and carried out widespread rape, torture and forced displacement of populations to "cleanse" areas of their opponents.

Some 3.9 million people are in crisis -- a third of the country's population -- a massive 80 percent rise compared to the same period last year, the UN said.

AFP
 

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