30,000 flee ethnic violence in South Sudan – UN

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30,000 civilians have fled their homes due to ethnic clashes by armed men.

On December 24, armed men from Jonglei state, an eastern region beset by gun violence, attacked communities in nearby Greater Pibor Administrative Area, the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said in a statement.

“People have suffered enough. Civilians, especially those most vulnerable – women, children, the elderly and the disabled, bear the brunt of this prolonged crisis,” Sara Beysolow Nyanti, the UN humanitarian coordinator in South Sudan explained.

Some 5,000 people have sought shelter in Pibor town, OCHA said, adding that the humanitarian response was severely stretched.

The clashes in Upper Nile state have also seen villagers seek shelter in swamps to escape the bloodshed, amid reports of civilians being raped, kidnapped or murdered.

International partners including the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) and the regional IGAD bloc, said in a joint statement Thursday that they were “gravely concerned” by the escalating violence.

They called on South Sudan’s leaders to step in, stressing “the need to investigate and hold accountable all perpetrators of the conflict, including those who are instigating and inciting violence.”