Wednesday, 28 October 2015

War crimes, forced cannibalism in South Sudan conflict


  • By AFP on October 28, 2015
South Sudan battle ragesBoth government and rebels in South Sudan carried out war crimes against civilians and should face justice, an African Union human rights inquiry has said.
The AU’s Commission of Inquiry on South Sudan lists a string of abuses, including forced cannibalism and dismemberment, in its report, published late Tuesday.
It also presents testimony that the ethnic violence, which began in the capital Juba in December 2013, may have been pre-planned.
“There are reasonable grounds to believe that acts of murder, rape and sexual violence, torture and other inhumane acts… have been committed by both sides to the conflict,” the report said.
However it added that there were “no reasonable grounds to believe that the crime of genocide has occurred”.
“The Commission believes that war crimes were committed in Juba, Bor, Bentiu and Malakal,” the report read, referring to key towns in South Sudan.
The 342-page report calls for an internationally-backed, African-led court to try those responsible for the violence.
It said a “highly confidential list” of “possible alleged perpetrators” will be submitted to the AU’s Peace and Security Council.
Among the most shocking of many acts of “extreme cruelty” identified in the report were claims of, “draining human blood from people who had just been killed and forcing others from one ethnic community to drink the blood or eat burnt human flesh.”
– ‘Most atrocities against civilians’ –
The commission, led by former Nigerian president Olusegun Obasanjo, carried out its research in 2014.
But publication was delayed as African leaders and AU officials feared the report might undermine peace talks.
A peace deal was finally signed by President Salva Kiir and rebel leader Riek Machar in August this year but has been repeatedly broken.
A recommendation — contained in a leaked earlier draft of the report — that Kiir, Machar and others be barred from political office was dropped from the final report, but remained in a published “Separate Opinion” submitted by commission member Mahmood Mamdani, a Ugandan academic.
Much of the worst of the documented violence was carried out in Juba, where soldiers of Kiir’s Dinka tribe massacred ethnic Nuers, and in the town of Bor, where Nuers loyal to Machar killed Dinkas.
The report gave little credence to Kiir’s claim that the civil war was triggered by Machar planning a coup, and included testimony that the Dinka-on-Nuer violence in Juba had been prepared for in advance.
“The Commission found that most of the atrocities were carried out against civilian populations taking no active part in the hostilities. Places of religion and hospitals were attacked, humanitarian assistance was impeded, towns pillaged and destroyed,” said the report.
The commission said an independent “hybrid” court should be established by the AU, as well as a reparations fund and a truth commission.

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