JUBA, South Sudan: Columns of heavily armed South Sudanese gunmen in a tribal militia are fighting their way toward a rival community in the eastern Jonglei state, a local official said yesterday.
Lou Nuer and Dinka gunmen from northern Jonglei are reported to be marching south toward Pibor, an area of their rivals, the Murle.
“We are worried that a lot of people will die, especially women and children,” said Pibor County Commissioner Joshua Konyi, speaking to AFP via a crackling satellite phone from the town.
He said civilians further out in the swampy bush were reporting that Murle civilians were fleeing ahead of rampaging gangs of Lou Nuer gunmen armed with semi-automatic rifles, machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades.
“I’m worried because the Lou Nuer youth are there in huge numbers,” he said, adding that some reports estimated the militia force to number several thousand.
The latest round of fierce fighting broke out a week ago in Pibor county in conflict-wracked Jonglei, as government troops try clamp down on a rebellion as well as warring ethnic militia.
The United Nations peacekeeping mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) is “deeply concerned about reports of a major mobilization of armed youth (and) reported clashes,” it said in a statement late Thursday.
The latest clashes follows bitter fighting in May, when soldiers and other gunmen looted UN and aid agency stores in Pibor, including a key hospital.
US State Department officials said Thursday they were “deeply disturbed by mounting reports of abuse of civilians, including targeted killings, rape, beatings, and the looting and destruction of homes and humanitarian facilities.”
South Sudan’s rebel-turned-official army has also been fighting in the region to crush a rebellion since April 2011 led by David Yau Yau, who comes from the Murle people.
Government officials in Lou Nuer areas in northern Jonglei denied young men had set off to fight, but past clashes have followed a similar pattern.
In December 2011, some 8,000 Lou Nuer marched south killing and looting in what they said were reprisals for earlier attacks and cattle raids by Murle fighters.
The UN later estimated over 600 people were massacred, although local officials reported the figure to have been far higher.
Rights groups accuse all sides of abusing and raping civilians.
UN peacekeepers are based in Pibor and “are patrolling in the town,” but are not deployed in frontline areas, Konyi said.
UNMISS admitted they were “not in an immediate position” to confirm details about the clashes.
Low level aerial patrols are limited after soldiers in December shot down a UN helicopter, claiming they thought it was from former civil war foes in Sudan, who Juba regularly accuse of arming rebels as a proxy force.
Ground patrols have also been scaled back after five UN peacekeepers and seven UN civilian workers were killed in an ambush in April near Pibor.
Jonglei was one of the areas hardest hit in Sudan’s 1983-2005 north-south civil war, which ended in a peace deal that paved the way for the South’s full independence.
But the new nation is awash with guns, while communities that were once pitted against each other during Khartoum’s rule remain rivals.
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