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Tribal clashes in South Sudan

Chrispin Mwakideu (AFP, AP, Reuters)July 15, 2013

Over 200 people have been wounded in ongoing ethnic violence between Lou Nuer and Murle tribes over the past one week. The two tribes have constantly fought over cattle and land dating back to colonial times.

https://p.dw.com/p/197vP
Image: picture-alliance/dpa

"The communities are in urgent need of medical attention," Toby Lanzer, the U.N. Humanitarian Coordinator in South Sudan, said in a statement, referring to the ongoing fighting pitting the Lou Nuer against the Murle tribe. The top UN official warned more casualties could be found following more than one week of fierce tribal fighting in Jonglei.

JAW, SOUTH SUDAN - JULY 2: Sudanese refugees walk along the border road after crossing from North Sudan carrying their possessions July 2, 2012 in Jaw, South Sudan. Many refugees walk from four days to two weeks, fleeing the on-going conflict, to get to Yida refugee camp from the Nuba mountain region where they have no food. The Yida refugee camp has swollen to nearly 60,000 people as the refugees flee from South Kordofan in North Sudan, with 300-600 people arriving daily. The rainy season has increased the numbers of sick children suffering from Diarrhea and severe malnutrition, as the international aid community struggles to provide basic assistance to the growing population. Most have arrive with only the clothes they are wearing. (Photo by Paula Bronstein/Getty Images)
Most of the villagers have fled the fightingImage: Getty Images

"Some 200 casualties have arrived in Manyabol", Lanzer told the French news agency AFP. Manyabol is only one of the remote settlements where militia gunmen from rival ethnic groups have been battling.

UNMISS has about 6,800 troops in Africa's youngest nation. Around 1,100 of them are stationed in Jonglei.

New mandate

The United Nations Security Council last Thursday, (11.07.2013) renewed the mandate for its mission in South Sudan for another year.

Though there are no figures on possible deaths, Lanzer made an urgent appeal to leaders "to halt the cycle of violence that is leading to senseless loss of life and suffering amongst civilians." The UN said it was airlifting the most critically injured to Jonglei's main hospital in Bor.

Doctors attend to an 8-year-old Sineah who cut her toe badly while digging an anti-bomb trench. ) +++(c) dpa - Bildfunk+++
Doctors Without Borders say they have treated more than 20 injuredImage: picture-alliance/dpa

Martin Searle, spokesman for Doctors Without Borders (MSF - Medecins Sans Frontieres) said they were treating “gunshot wounds and leg fractures. ” He also added that they were expecting to see more patients.

History of violence

Cattle raids and reprisal killings are a common occurrence in Jonglei. The two tribes have been traditional enemies for more than fifty years. Lou Nuer people are estimated to be over one million, while the Murle tribe numbers about half a million people. Both these two communities practice pastoralism.

Ethnic rivalries were exacerbated by the 1983-2005 war with Khartoum, which armed and pitted communities against each other.

DW correspondent James Shimanyula quoted South Sudan's representative to the UN, Francis Deng as saying the presence of small arms in his country is due to the civil war. "There is a gap which can be attributed to the negative legacy of a long and devastating conflict," according to Deng, the conflict left his people traumatized, militarized and heavily armed.

South Sudan's largest state is also facing a rebel insurgency in Pibor County led by a renegade colonel David Yau Yau since 2010. Yau Yau who comes from the Murle tribe says he is fighting corruption, army abuses and one-party rule in South Sudan.

Young men herd cattle through the mud-caked streets of Pibor, South Sudan. (Foto:Maggie Fick/AP/dapd)
In pastoral communities such as the Lou Nuer and Murle, cattle are an indicator of wealthImage: dapd

South Sudan accuses Sudan of supplying Yau Yau with weapons, a claim supported by diplomats. But South Sudan's army is also fuelling dissent with reports of its troops committing human rights abuses such as rape, killings and torture during a state disarmament campaign. The two conflicts have made it difficult for humanitarian agencies to gain access to the area. Seasonal rainfall also makes the few roads available impassable.

Where are the young men?

Some government officials in Lou Nuer areas in northern Jonglei denied that young men had set off to fight. Local commissioner Koang Rambang Chol dismissed reports that any of the Lou Nuer youth have left. "This is farming season," he said, before adding that perhaps "some of the youth will be patrolling the borders of our areas. " Rambang Chol's response follows a similar pattern in which local leaders have denied past clashes.

A dirt road leads to the border from this aerial photo near Yida refugee camp along the border with North Sudan. Bronstein/Getty Images)
Like this border road with Sudan, Most of South Sudan's roads are dirt roadsImage: Getty Images

However Jonglei Governor Kuol Manyang Juuk confirmed to local journalists that there had been an offensive. "The Lou Nuer youth have moved to the Murle land, But what can I do. The security forces cannot even go on foot," the Governor said.

"It is too wet now to move in the wetland, " Manyang Juuk added, saying "the best is that citizens move to where the SPLA forces are for protection."

Western powers are worried the violence could lead to an all out civil war. According to the UN, a cycle of tribal clashes has claimed the lives of more than 1,600 people in Jonglei since South Sudan's seceded from Sudan.