UN sends peacekeeper troops to stop bout of ethnic violence in South Sudan

The United Nations has sent a contingent of peacekeeping forces to an area of central South Sudan. This move was taken following the death of about 80 people in a bout of fighting between two ethnic communities, the UN and a local official said on Tuesday.

The violence between the Gak and Manuer communities broke out on November 27 and it has lasted for days, said Benjamin Laat, information minister for Western Lakes state.

“It was a revenge killing when one of the Manuer was killed by the guys from Gak. The government intervened,” Laat said.

The United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) said in a statement that Nepalese troops serving with the peacekeeping force had been sent to the area after reports from local authorities that more than 79 people have been killed and 101 injured in a series of clashes in Western Lakes.

Oil-producing South Sudan, which became an independent country in 2011, dragged on civil war in 2013 after President Salva Kiir sacked former rebel leader Riek Machar as vice president.

After a five-year conflict, Kiir and Machar sealed a peace deal in September 2018 but they are still struggling to form a unity government.

The conflict killed around 400,000 people, triggered a famine and created Africa’s biggest refugee crisis since the 1994 genocide in Rwanda.

Source: Reuters

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