UN warns about looming threat of 'genocide' in South Sudan
(last modified Sat, 12 Nov 2016 07:17:11 GMT )
Nov 12, 2016 07:17 UTC
  • Soldiers of the Sudan People Liberation Army (SPLA) celebrate while standing in trenches in Lelo, outside Malakal, northern South Sudan, October 16, 2016. (Photo by AFP)
    Soldiers of the Sudan People Liberation Army (SPLA) celebrate while standing in trenches in Lelo, outside Malakal, northern South Sudan, October 16, 2016. (Photo by AFP)

A United Nations expert has warned that South Sudan's festering civil war could spiral into “genocide.”

According to Press TV, Adama Dieng, the UN Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide, said on Friday there is a "strong risk of violence escalating along ethnic lines with the potential for genocide."

Dieng, who was speaking at a press conference in the capital Juba, cited recent examples of ethnically targeted rape, civilians being killed with machetes, and villages being burned to the ground.

Dieng said South Sudan was awash with weapons, had an undisciplined military, and was in a humanitarian and economic crisis in which civilians were desperate for employment, adding that all the elements were present for a disaster.

"Genocide is a process," said Dieng. To stop the process, Dieng proposed a strategy of reconciliation and dialog among the two ethnically divided groups fighting in South Sudan.

Even as Dieng spoke, a radio station was shut down by South Sudan's National Security Service.

Eye Radio is one of South Sudan's largest national radio stations and known for what is said to be its message of peace and harmony. It is funded in part by the US Agency for International Development.

On Friday, three officials from the country's security service seized the keys to Eye Radio's studios, told journalists to leave, and ordered the head of the station to report to security officials, said Nichola Mandil, a senior journalist with the station.

A spokesman for the security service declined to give an explanation for the shutdown.

When informed that Eye Radio had been shut by the government, Dieng's voice rose with ire and he said the South Sudan government "should have encouraged, congratulated and used (Eye Radio) as a model and said from now onwards that is the message we want."

Instead, some of South Sudan's media and social media have spread hate speech, Dieng said.

Alfred Taban, the Chairman of the Association for Media Development in South Sudan, said, "Press freedom has not been OK for a long time. This closure now indicates the situation has not changed and the government is still hostile to the national media."

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