Mar 24, 2017 (Jonglei Times)-The UN Security Council voiced alarm about the deepening
humanitarian crisis and famine in South Sudan, with the United States, Britain
and France raising anew the idea of sanctions and a weapons embargo.
Attacks on humanitarian and UN
missions, serial rapes, recruitment of child soldiers and famine: Six years
after independence, "all the optimism that accompanied the birth of South
Sudan has been shattered by internal divisions, rivalries and the irresponsible
behavior of some of its leaders," said UN Secretary-General Antonio
Guterres.
"Despite the alarm sounded by
the United Nations and the international community over this crisis, the
government has yet to express any meaningful concern or take any tangible steps
to address the plight of its people," said Guterres, who participated in
the council meeting on South Sudan.
The UN chief denounced "a
refusal by the leadership to even acknowledge the crisis or to fulfill its
responsibilities to end it."
While concern about continued
fighting, atrocities and the worsening humanitarian crisis seemed to be
unanimously shared, at issue is what the Security Council can do to compel the
forces of President Salva Kiir and those of his rival Riek Machar to restore a
cease-fire and political dialogue under a 2015 peace agreement.
The United States, which
unsuccessfully pushed for an arms embargo in December, raised that possibility
again Thursday, supported by Britain and France.
"We are outraged by the events
unfolding in South Sudan," said Michele Sison, the US deputy
representative to the United Nations. The United States had backed the
country's independence from Sudan in 2011.
"We have had warning after
warning about the prospect of future mass atrocities," she said.
"Last December some colleagues
in the Security Council argued that pressure would be counterproductive because
it would block the political process but there has been no progress since
December, instead the situation has deteriorated," she lamented.
- 'Deliberate starvation tactics.
Sison appeared to be taking the
position of the prior Barack Obama administration, which had sought a ban on
weapons sales.
According to the US diplomat, the
government's obstacles to humanitarian work in the famine-struck areas
"may amount to deliberate starvation tactics."
"An arms embargo is one tool
the council could use to address the continued violence," Sison urged,
pointing out that the council could also impose sanctions on the officials
responsible.
The 15-member council rejected a
proposed resolution including an arms embargo and sanctions against certain
leaders in December, after failing to get the nine votes necessary for
adoption.
Angola, China, Egypt, Japan,
Malaysia, Russia, Senegal and Venezuela abstained.
Britain's foreign secretary, Boris
Johnson, who chaired the council meeting Thursday, said an arms embargo
proposal would be submitted to the council, without specifying a timeframe.
According to data cited by Guterres,
100,000 people in South Sudan are already suffering famine. A million others
are near starvation and some 5.5 million could face starvation within the next
few months.
After gaining independence from
Sudan in 2011, South Sudan descended into war in December 2013, leaving tens of
thousands dead and 3.5 million people displaced, despite the deployment of some
12,000 UN peacekeepers.
Half of those displaced have fled to
neighboring countries, many of them to Uganda. More than 220,000 are sheltered
on UN sites.
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