Twenty
years after Rwanda’s genocide, the world’s newest state—not Syria or Darfur—is
the region most in danger of mass exterminations along ethnic lines.
With
Secretary of State John Kerry traveling to Ethiopia today, site of the peace
talks for
South Sudan, he will be greeted by a bracing reality: no civilians in
the world are in greater danger than those of South Sudan. Not in Syria,
Central African Republic, or Darfur is the threat of targeting on the basis of
identity so immediate as it is for certain ethnic groups in vulnerable areas of
South Sudan. Given the lack of protection by Juba government forces, the
inability of UN troops to protect large numbers of people, and the absence of
significantly greater protection from the broader international community,
hundreds of thousands of people are likely to die in the coming months, whether
directly through targeted violence or indirectly through hunger. It is an
unsurpassably urgent crisis and yet the world's response has been in no way
comparable to the threats civilians now face on a daily basis.
Following
the political and military events of mid-December when targeted violence
erupted in Juba, capital of South Sudan, conflict has steadily escalated. Now,
more than four months later, we are witnessing events that have all the
hallmarks of genocide. The split in South Sudan's army—the Sudan People's
Liberation Army (SPLA)—has been largely along ethnic lines, primarily between
the Dinka, the largest tribal group in the South, and the Nuer, the second
largest tribal group. As a consequence of this split, what appeared
initially to be a vehement demand for governance reforms—but without evident
military goals—has developed into a full-scale military rebellion, with violence
escalating into something like "symmetric warfare" between two forces
that are comparably trained and armed.
Unlike
the "asymmetric warfare" to which we have become accustomed to
hearing about (e.g., Iraq, Afghanistan, Darfur), symmetric warfare ensures
heavy casualties in military confrontations. But victories and defeats
now have more ominous consequences; for in South Sudan the victors see military
victory as justifying civilian slaughter of the predominant ethnic group of the
opposing forces. And with a terrifying momentum, ethnic slaughter leads
to yet greater ethnic slaughter. When the town of Bentiu in oil-rich
Unity State fell to rebel forces on April 15-16, hundreds of Dinka civilians
(and many Darfuris) were hunted down and killed—men, women, and children.
Hate radio locally broadcast locally urged the rape and murder of Dinkas—or
even Nuer who were not enthusiastic enough about the victory. Meanwhile,
in Bor (Jonglei State), Nuer civilians under the protection of the UN force (UNMISS,
UN Mission in South Sudan) made the mistake of celebrating the victory of the
rebels in Bentiu; in reprisal, a large gang of Dinka youth broke into the UN
compound and killed dozens of Nuer. We have seen earlier versions of this
vicious ethnic violence in Malakal (Upper Nile) and in other smaller towns, as
well as Juba itself.
Toby
Lanzer, who heads UN humanitarian operations in South Sudan, has referred to
the slaughter in Bentiu as a "game changer." Whether or not the game
changed with this particular incident, it provided clear evidence that without
an international force capable of enforcing a separation of armed elements, or
at least robustly protecting civilians, the fighting will intensify and become
more relentlessly ethnic in character.
Beyond
the human suffering and destruction that is a consequence of this terrible
violence, an even larger threat looms. For fighting has already displaced
more than a million people from their homes and villages, and has done so in
the midst of the planting season—April and May, when the rainy season
begins. For planting to be successful, people, seeds, and farming
equipment need to be in the same place at the same time. For displaced
people this simply doesn't happen; and if this planting season is a failure,
the fall harvest will be as well. Famine will stalk the land and as many
as seven million people will confront extreme food insecurity—in short,
starvation. And the penchant that both parties have for blocking
humanitarian aid to areas controlled by the other will exacerbate the
difficulties for residents of the most affected areas.
The
situation, however, is not hopeless. There are steps that could be taken
to prevent full-scale genocide, which Secretary Kerry can advance during his
visit. First, appropriate international forces need to be deployed to
South Sudan to protect civilians. A vanguard regional force should deploy
to protect large concentrations of internally displaced persons who are most at
risk of targeted attack. This must be followed by a substantial
augmentation of the UN mission in the region (UNMISS), which as it has deployed
is militarily incapable of protecting all civilians in need.
Second,
a major international diplomatic press led by a respected international figure
is needed to negotiate a cross-line humanitarian assistance delivery
channel.
Third,
biting sanctions need to be imposed by a coalition of states willing to
collectively seize bank accounts, houses, cars, and any other assets owned by
government or rebel officials—or other regional actors—complicit in war crimes
or obstruction of aid deliveries. Consequences are needed to increase
international leverage over the parties, including ramping up efforts to create
a mixed judicial process internally and to refer the war crimes perpetrated
there to the International Criminal Court
Fourth,
international efforts in support of a peace process must redouble.
Leverage should be built by key states with influence and deployed in the
service of the talks. And civil society and political opposition should
receive greater international support and be meaningfully included in the peace
process as well.
Twenty
years ago Rwanda was engulfed in the flames of hatred, as Darfur has been for
10 years. Hundreds of thousands died because no meaningful international
action was taken. With South Sudan threatening to explode in an
ever-expanding cycle of revenge, that legacy of international failure must be
reversed, or hundreds of thousands more will die—on our watch.
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