UN must improve peacekeeping in S. Sudan, say aid groups

UN must improve peacekeeping in S. Sudan, say aid groups
United Nations peacekeepers control South Sudanese women and children before the distribution of emergency food supplies at the United Nations protection of civilians (POC) site 3 hosting about 30,000 people displaced during the recent fighting in Juba, South Sudan, on July 25, 2016. (REUTERS/Adriane Ohanesian)
Updated 30 July 2016
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UN must improve peacekeeping in S. Sudan, say aid groups

UN must improve peacekeeping in S. Sudan, say aid groups

NAIROBI, Kenya: The UN should urgently improve its peacekeeping mission in South Sudan to protect civilians and help deliver aid to civilians affected by the country’s civil war, said 10 relief organizations working in the country.
The groups, including Oxfam, CARE, and the International Rescue Committee, issued a joint statement in South Sudan’s capital, Juba, on Friday following reports by The Associated press and others that UN peacekeepers failed to act when government forces targeted civilians under the UN’s protection, including raping dozens of Nuer women. The inability of the UN peacekeeping mission “to protect civilians threatens to undermine any attempts at safety and security in the country and makes it impossible for humanitarian agencies to provide the help that is so urgently needed,” said Frederick McCray, CARE’s director in South Sudan.
The UN peacekeeping force in South Sudan has about 12,000 armed troops who are mandated to use lethal force if necessary to protect civilians. The mission is also mandated to help the delivery of humanitarian aid.
Some 4.8 million South Sudanese, nearly half the country’s population, are facing severe food shortages, according to the World Food Program.
But armed men and others are accused of mass looting of humanitarian supplies, including food which would have fed 220,000 people for a month, following fighting in Juba earlier this month that killed hundreds of people. Restrictions on flights have also limited aid groups’ ability to reach populations in need, the aid groups said.
“If security conditions deteriorate further, providing aid will become logistically impossible. Humanitarian aid has probably already prevented famine in hard-to-reach parts of South Sudan, if aid agencies cannot operate fully the consequences could be catastrophic,” said Zlatko Gegic, Oxfam’s South Sudan director.