Juba / New York, Safar 18, 1438, November 18, 2016, SPA -- U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon warns that there is a real risk of mass atrocities being committed in South Sudan, following a sharp rise in hate speech and ethnic incitement. In a report to the Security Council released Wednesday, Ban said that U.N. peacekeepers in South Sudan lack the manpower and capability to stop mass atrocities should they occur. "There is a very real risk of mass atrocities being committed in South Sudan, in particular following the sharp rise in hate speech and ethnic incitement in recent weeks," the report states. "While the secretariat will continue to make every effort to implement the mandated task of protecting civilians through the use of 'all necessary means,' it must be clearly understood that United Nations peacekeeping operations do not have the appropriate reach, manpower or capabilities to stop mass atrocities." In the report, Ban repeated earlier calls on the Security Council to impose an arms embargo on the country which he said is "inundated with weaponry." The director of U.N. humanitarian operations John Gink, who had just returned from a visit to Haiti, Sudan and South Sudan reinforced Ban's concerns at a news conference Wednesday. "Of the three countries I visited, South Sudan is the one that causes the most alarm in terms of the trajectory the country is on," Gink said. "In every element of the functioning of the country you are seeing a deterioration." In 2013, the country was plunged into civil war when government forces loyal to President Salva Kiir, an ethnic Dinka, battled rebels led by his former vice president Machar, who is a Nuer. A peace agreement was signed in August 2015, but fighting continues. Tens of thousands have been killed and more than 2 million displaced. -- SPA 03:54 LOCAL TIME 00:54 GMT www.spa.gov.sa/w271857
مشاركة :