Fighting enters 5th day in South Sudan capital

Explosions and heavy weapons gunfire shook the South Sudan's capital Juba in the fifth day of clashes between government and opposition forces, raising the spectre of a return to civil war.
Heavy explosions are shaking South Sudan's capital Juba.
Picture  APHeavy explosions are shaking South Sudan's capital Juba.
Picture  AP
Heavy explosions are shaking South Sudan's capital Juba. Picture AP

Widespread shooting preventing residents from moving in the city.

A “massive explosion” hit shortly after 9am followed by further blasts in the Tomping area of Juba, home to embassies, the airport and a UN base, said an aid worker.

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“It rings through the whole city every time they fire,” said the aid worker, “I think one of the tanks must be near me, my ears are burning.”

Explosions and “very heavy gunfire” sounding “like popcorn,” was reported by a resident in the Gudele area.

Considerable fighting has centered around the UN base in the Jebel area, where some 30,000 civilians have taken refuge. The opposition also has a base near Jebel and their leader also has his home there.

Two government helicopters have been bombing areas near the base while ground forces shell the base, including a camp of tens of thousands of displaced civilians, according to a source within the UN compound.

The displaced civilians are mostly of the Nuer ethnicity and sought protection from the UN after a series of government-led killings of Nuer in Juba in 2013 which sparked the civil war, according to an African Union commission of inquiry.

Government officials have repeatedly accused the civilians inside the UN bases of being rebels or rebel supporters.

UN peacekeepers have not fired at the troops shelling the base, said the source in the base, who accused the soldiers with UN blue helmets of abandoning their positions.

“UN peacekeepers, they even run away,” he said. “They are not stopping it.” UN peacekeepers in South Sudan are mandated to use lethal force to protect civilians under imminent threat in South Sudan.

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Two UN peacekeepers from China were killed at the base Sunday night, according to Chinese state media. An eyewitness said that he saw a government tank fire on a Chinese armored personnel carrier. Video broadcast on Chinese state TV showed smoke rising after the attack and Chinese peacekeepers tending to their wounded.

There were 67 injuries and 8 deaths in the UN base Sunday, according to an internal situation report circulated among humanitarian organisations. Water tanks have not been able to bring water to the tens of thousands sheltering inside the base.

The fighting in the capital began Thursday and continued through the weekend, when South Sudan marked its fifth anniversary of independence from Sudan. The gun battles in the capital are similar to fighting in December 2013 that sparked a two-year civil war in which tens of thousands died and displaced more than 2 million.

President Salva Kiir and former rebel leader Riek Machar, who is now vice president, signed a peace accord last year and formed a transitional coalition government. But fighting continued despite the peace agreement and the current clashes in Juba threaten to plunge the parts of South Sudan that had been relatively stable back into violence.

The renewed fighting has exposed South Sudan’s ethnic divisions; Kiir’s supporters are largely Dinka and Machar’s followers mostly Nuer.