South Sudan’s Vice President Accuses Uganda Of Violating UN Arms Embargo

0
279

South Sudan’s First Vice President Riek Machar has accused Uganda of violating a United Nations arms embargo by entering the country with armoured, air force units and conducting airstrikes there.

In a letter addressed to the U.N., African Union and the IGAD regional bloc, Machar said Uganda’s military intervention in South Sudan had violated a 2018 peace deal, which ended a brutal five-year civil war.

Uganda said it had deployed troops in South Sudan earlier this month at the request of the government there, following a breakdown in the turbulent relationship between Machar and President Salva Kiir.

In early March, security forces rounded up several of Machar’s most senior allies following clashes in South Sudan’s northeast between the military and the White Army militia, a force the government accuses Machar of supporting.

Machar’s SPLM-IO party denies any ongoing links with the White Army, which mostly comprises armed ethnic Nuer who fought alongside Machar against Kiir’s largely Dinka forces during the 2013-2018 conflict.

The U.N. has warned a rise in hate speech could plunge the country back to war along ethnic lines.

Uganda fears a full-blown conflagration in its oil-producing northern neighbour could send waves of refugees across the border and potentially create instability.

“The Ugandan forces are currently taking part in airstrikes against civilians,” Machar said in the March 23 letter, urging pressure on Uganda to withdraw its troops.

A spokesperson for Machar’s office verified the authenticity of the letter seen by Reuters.

South Sudan’s army attacked SPLM-IO forces stationed at a camp near the capital, Juba, on Monday night, the party’s military spokesperson Lam Paul Gabriel said on X.

Major General Lul Ruai Koang, the government military spokesperson, said he would issue a statement once he had gathered all the relevant information.

Machar’s spokesperson, Pal Mai Deng, said on Tuesday that intelligence officers in Lakes State had arrested four SPLM-IO officials and shut down their office in the state’s capital, Rumbek.

Last week Uganda’s parliament retrospectively approved the deployment in South Sudan, first announced on March 11.

In a series of since-deleted posts published on X in the early hours of Sunday, Uganda’s military chief, Muhoozi Kainerugaba, said: “I’m tired of killing Nuer,” referring to Machar’s ethnic group.

“Tell your leader Riek Machar to come and kneel down before ‘our’ President H.E Salva Kiir,” wrote Kainerugaba, who has a history of making inflammatory statements that have previously sparked diplomatic tensions in the region.