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Thursday, October 20, 2022

UN rights experts seek urgent implementation of South Sudan peace deal

UN human rights experts called for urgent action to implement the 2018 South Sudan peace deal aimed at saving the lives of those affected by the conflict in the country.

• October 20, 2022
Unrest in South Sudan (Credit: Foreign Policy)
Unrest in South Sudan (Credit: Foreign Policy)

UN human rights experts on Wednesday called for urgent action to implement the 2018 South Sudan peace deal aimed at saving the lives of those affected by the conflict in the country.

The appeal by the members of the UN Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan follows a visit to Ethiopia, where they urged African countries and other stakeholders to renew their support for the implementation of the deal.

The experts said the conflict in South Sudan had become increasingly complex, with the level of suffering for millions of civilians becoming intolerable.

The commission was in Addis Ababa from October 12 to 18 for meetings with the Africa Union (AU), the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD), the diplomatic corps, the UN, civil society, and others.

“Every new extension of the timelines for implementation of the peace agreement, and indeed every passing day of inaction, means not just time lost, but lives lost,” human rights commissioner Barney Afako warned during the visit.

South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir and his former Vice-President Riek Machar signed the Revitalised Peace Agreement in September 2018 to end bitter fighting that plagued the young nation.

However, the commission statement noted that “progress has been extremely slow” in implementing the deal.

The accord provides for a Hybrid Court, a Commission for Truth, Reconciliation and Healing (CTRH) and a reparations process which should have been established more than two years ago.

Furthermore, core aspects of the agreement, including the unification of security forces, have been hampered by the persistent dispute over the allocation of ratios of representation and resources.

The parties have also consistently failed to meet deadlines set for critical reforms, and the establishment of transitional justice bodies, without any credible justification.

“South Sudan’s peace process cannot implement itself; the people of South Sudan whose lives depend on it, want to see more energy expended on breathing life into this document,” said Yasmin Sooka, the commission’s chair.

She underscored the need for the African Union to take the next steps necessary to establish the Hybrid Court and support the Truth Commission and the other processes.

(NAN)

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