Two Indian peacekeepers have been killed, and another injured from a chest wound following an assault on a UN base in South Sudan where civilians hid fearing violence from rival ethnic groups. A further 20 died in the violence.
The Indian ambassador to the United Nations Asoke Mukerji
confirmed that there had 'unfortunately' been deaths 'just this
very morning' at a UN meeting.
The UN announced that ethnic Nuer youth attackers stormed the
base at Akobo, in Jonglei state, in pursuit of civilians from a
rival ethnic group, Dinka. Contact with the base has been lost.
"We have received reports of people killed and injured and are in
the process of verifying," said UN deputy secretary general
Jan Eliasson told AFP.
At least 20 people from the ethnic Dinka group in South Sudan
were killed in the violence, according to a UN estimate released
on Friday.
The UN Security Council condemned "the fighting and targeted
violence against civilians of certain ethnic and other
communities across the country , which resulted in hundreds of
people being killed and injured, and tens of thousands fleeing
their homes" on Friday.
According to Haq, 40 other peacekeepers and six UN advisors were
evacuated to South Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) camp for
safety. On Friday 60 reinforcements and an aircraft send by the
UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) will arrive to support and
evacuate the peacekeepers, Haq said.
UN forces are protecting 14,000 civilians gathered around a base
in Bor, capital of Jonglei state.
A statement said UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was “appalled”
to learn of the attack.
“There are indications that civilians may have been killed
and wounded in the attack, but this remains to be verified.
Should these reports prove true, those responsible must be held
accountable for their crimes,” the statement said.
South Sudan's authorities said that security forces "are in
absolute control of the situation" but retracted the
statement later saying they lost control of Bor, the capital of
the country's largest state.
“We lost control of Bor to the rebellion," said Philip
Aguer, the South Sudanese military spokesman.
Thursday’s attack came after armed brigades loyal to the former vice president Riek Machar captured the town of Bor on Wednesday. Citing figures from the South Sudan Red Cross, at least 19 civilians had been killed in Bor, according to Martin Nesirky, a spokesman for the UN Secretary-General.
Earlier in the week, President Salva Kiir, a Dinka, accused his
rival, an ethnic Nuer, and his supporters of an attempted coup,
after the clashes erupted on Sunday, when the presidential guards
from the president's majority tried to disarm guards from the
Nuer ethnic group.
Machar disputed Kiir's accusations but said he wants Kiir to
leave power.
"We want him to leave. We want him to leave. That's it,"
Machar told Radio France Internationale. "He can't unite the
people and he kills them like flies."
Meanwhile foreigners are being extracted from the country with
Britain deploying military aircraft to help with the evacuations.
“The flight was at the request of the Foreign and
Commonwealth Office, who are coordinating the evacuation, which
was prompted by security issues in the African state,” the
military said in a statement Thursday.
The UN also used four helicopters to transport 75 people to Juba,
according to Challiss McDonough, a spokeswoman for the UN World
Food Program.
The US which began the evacuation of its citizens on Wednesday
has already flown back 4 groups of Americans. On Thursday
President Barack Obama urged all warring parties to restore
peace.
“Inflammatory rhetoric and targeted violence must
cease," Obama said. "All sides must listen to the wise
counsel of their neighbors, commit to dialogue and take immediate
steps to urge calm and support reconciliation.”
South Sudan gained independence from Sudan in 2011 after a
two-decade brutal civil war in which more than two million people
died. In the recent escalation of violence over 500 people have
already been killed since Sunday.