Press releases Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights
SPLA committed widespread violations during and after July fighting in South Sudan – Zeid
South Sudan violations
04 August 2016
GENEVA (4 August 2016) – Preliminary UN investigations into recent fighting in South Sudan, and its aftermath, reveal Government security forces carried out killings and rapes, and looted and destroyed properties, the UN human rights chief said Thursday, as he called on the Security Council to take stronger action.
“Tensions remain very high, and violations continue to take place in Juba and other parts of the country,” said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, after providing a written update to the Security Council on the preliminary findings of ongoing UN investigations into the five days of fighting that began in the capital Juba on 7July, and its aftermath.
The UN human rights chief said that information received by UN human rights officers suggests hundreds of fighters and civilians were killed during the initial fighting. While some civilians were killed in crossfire between the fighting forces, others were reportedly summarily executed by Government (SPLA) soldiers, who appear to have specifically targeted people of Nuer origin.
For example, in two separate incidents on 11 July, South Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) soldiers reportedly arrested eight Nuer civilians during house-to-house searches in Juba’s Munuki area and took them to two nearby hotels, where they shot four of them. On the same day, SPLA soldiers broke into another hotel where they shot and killed a Nuer journalist.
At least 73 civilian deaths have been catalogued so far by the UN, but it is believed the civilian death toll may in fact turn out to be much higher. The UN was denied access to some of the hardest-hit areas in the days following the conflict and a number of restrictions on movement remain in place.
“The fighting also resulted in widespread sexual violence, including rape and gang rape by soldiers in uniform and men in plain clothes,” Zeid said, adding that Nuer, Dinka and women from the three Equatorian states were all targeted, along with foreign nationals. Many victims were minors.
“We have documented at least 217 cases of sexual violence in Juba between 8 and 25 July,” Zeid said. “In a few areas, women from various ethnic groups were raped by heavily armed youth believed to be affiliated to the SPLA in Opposition (SPLA/IO),” he added. “However, according to the information we have gathered so far, those most affected were displaced Nuer women and girls and those responsible seem to have been mostly SPLA.”
Sexual violence continued after the initial fighting subsided and over 100 women and girls are reported to have been raped or gang-raped on the road leading out of Juba towards Yei. On 18 July, for example, 35 women and girls were reportedly raped in two separate incidents: firstly, 28 women, including 12 minors, were allegedly assaulted at an SPLA checkpoint at the Jebel Junction on the Yei Road; and in the second incident that day, seven other women were reportedly raped on the road between two Protection of Civilians sites, where people – mostly Nuer -- displaced by earlier rounds of fighting are protected by UNMISS peacekeepers.
Witnesses and victims interviewed by human rights officers reported that women and girls were also robbed of their belongings, beaten up and verbally abused by SPLA soldiers and other security officers at these and other check points across the city. The High Commissioner expressed concern about allegations that some peacekeepers may have failed to assist women and girls who were reportedly raped and assaulted near their positions, took note of UNMISS measures to address this situation and urged strong action in those instances where UN military personnel defaulted over their duty to protect civilians.
The High Commissioner said that sexual violence was not limited to Juba and he recalled that a report released by the UN Human Rights Office on 11 March described how both Government and opposition forces had carried out thousands of brutal rapes and gang rapes during the aftermath of the conflict that broke out in Juba in December 2013. Zeid described this at the time as “massive use of rape as an instrument of terror and weapon of war.”
The High Commissioner condemned the lack of effective responses to end impunity for human rights violations as well as violations and abuses of international humanitarian law. “The rapes and killings of civilians continue, the impunity remains, and the Hybrid Court and other proposed measures to enhance protection and accountability have not yet been implemented,” he said.
During the five days of fighting, thousands more people were forcibly displaced, and many civilians were denied access to safety in UN compounds by SPLA soldiers manning the various checkpoints that sprang up across Juba. There have also been reports of forced recruitment by the SPLA, including of children, in Bor.
Noting that in the wake of the violence the Government has severely restricted the right to freedom of expression and clamped down on journalists, the High Commissioner urged it to concentrate instead on justice and accountability: “The Government says it has established a court martial to try SPLA soldiers accused of committing crimes against civilians, including ‘looting, murder and other forms of human rights abuses,’” he noted. “It has made similar promises in the past, but the violations continue unabated.”
The High Commissioner urged the Transitional Government of National Unity to restore dialogue and take steps to ensure justice and accountability, and called on the international community to put real pressure on the Government , to halt violence and respect the life of all South Sudanese. “The severity of the recent violence, and the very dangerous ethnic undertone, call for urgent action by the Security Council,” he said.
The High Commissioner’s Office provided the Security Council with a written update of the Human Rights Offices preliminary findings on Tuesday, describing the information UN human rights staff have been able to gather so far as just “a snapshot ” given the very tense and volatile situation, and limited access to witnesses and victims. The update also stressed the dire – and deteriorating – humanitarian and economic situations.
ENDS
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