The African Union (AU) is considering sending troops to South Sudan, as a
last resort to quell the wide scale violence that broke out between
soldiers loyal to President Salva Kiir and those backing Vice President,
Riek Machar.
| Delegates at the AU summit in Kigali. CYRIL NDEGEYA |
At least 300 people were reported killed including two Chinese peacekeepers while thousands of civilians fled the capital Juba.
In a closed door emergency meeting during the 27th AU Summit in
Kigali on Monday, delegates discussed the possibility of sending a
neutral armed force to separate both groups of fighters, protect the
unarmed civilians and enforce the peace agreement signed in August last
year.
“The peace and security council is considering sending troops if
need be, and you know that under Article IV of the assembly, we can do
so. I think you will see the outcome of this meeting, but the
determination is there to act on the situation, including sending a
force,” Ambassador Smail Chergui, AU Commissioner for Peace and
Security, told The East African in an interview.
“This adds to our frustration because we deployed tremendous
efforts to have Riek Machar go back to Juba and to have the transitional
government working together. We had hoped that the implementation of
the peace agreement had started but unfortunately, this violent
development really questions the peace agreement,” he added.
Right to intervene
He however could not disclose the timeline for when such a decision, if made, would be implemented.
Under Article IV of the protocol establishing the Peace and
Security Council of the AU, the body has a right to intervene in a
member state in case of grave circumstances such as war crimes, genocide
and crimes against humanity.
“We want a commission to establish how the conflict started and
who is behind it. We must hold accountable those responsible for this
violence. They have to be accountable for their actions,” ambassador
Chergui said.
“The council has urged all the leaders in that country to
implement an immediate ceasefire and to take all the necessary measures
to have a peaceful atmosphere for the protection of civilians and to
establish the commission of inquiry,” he said.
Similarly, the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD)
council of ministers, today, condemned the fresh wave of violence in
South Sudan, noting that it had “once again placed the long suffering
people of South Sudan in unspeakable harm`s way”.
The UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-Moon also said "there must and
will be accountability” for the atrocities committed in South Sudan
since 2013.
“It is not just leaders who must face a reckoning, but all those
in the chain of command, including chiefs of staff and other officials
complicit in the violence,” he said in a statement.
South Sudan has experienced waves of violence since its
independence in 2011, with a civil war breaking out at the end of 2013
when Kiir accused his deposed deputy, Machar, of plotting a coup.
in August 2015, a peace deal was signed and Machar was
reinstated as vice president in the hope that the conflict would finally
end - but fighting has continued despite the establishment of a
transitional unity government.
The East African
The East African
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário