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3 1112Sudan_Bishop Eduardo Hiiboro Kussala of Tombura-Yambio

South Sudanese families face death

Without a ceasefire, the lives of displaced people are at serious risk say Christian country’s religious leaders, John Newton and Oliver Maksan report

RELIGIOUS leaders in South Sudan warned that thousands of internal refugees could starve or fall dangerously ill unless a ceasefire stops heavy fighting in the country’s Mundri region. Following a visit to the crisis-hit area, members of the Inter-Faith Council for Peace in Western Equatoria described how those who had fled the conflict were now living rough.

“As we speak people are already dying, and in particular children and elderly people,” a statement by the council reads. “During the past two months more than 80,000 people had been forced to live in the bush and the jungle in the area. Children and women are those most affected. They will be exposed to a variety of epidemics and to starvation if they don’t get help soon.”

The council, which includes Bishop Eduardo Kussala of Tombura Yambio (above) and Maaki Juma Daud head of the region’s Muslim community, called for an immediate cessation to the gun battles so that displaced families could receive aid.

Around 16,000 children have been pitted against each other in harrowing episodes of violence in the 21-month long conflict in South Sudan, United Nations Children’s Fund said in a statement yesterday.

Fr David Kulandai Samy of the Missionaries of Mary Immaculate, who has worked in the area since 2012, described the current crisis to Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need. “Our parish people who have moved into bushes are facing untold misery—particularly children suffer without food, water and medical assistance,” he said. “Community people’s standing crops have been destroyed and their assets were looted, including cattle

Fr Samy told ACN he was almost killed by the fighting: “With the grace of God we had a narrow escape from gunfire and we thank God for having survived till today.”

According to the Missionaries of Mary Immaculate priest, the current conflict in the region began when nine members of the Dinka tribe were killed in September, reportedly by government soldiers. Government troops also shot members of the Moru tribe and ethnic tensions triggered attacks on the Dinka by Moru warriors. As a result of the conflict numerous Catholic families had been forced to flee from their homes, taking refuge in Church buildings. Many of these families were further displaced by the fighting, fleeing into the bush.

The fighting is connected to the civil war that has been raging in the country since December 2013. A state of the nation address by the South Sudanese President Salva Kiir, highly anticipated since he signed a peace deal on August 26, was called off yesterday.

The mainly Christian Republic of South Sudan gained its independence from the mostly Muslim Sudan in 2011. Fr Samy has asked ACN’s benefactors to pray for those caught up in the ongoing conflict.

 

www.acnuk.org

 

 

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