South Sudanese government troops allegedly participated in
the rape and gruesome killings of civilians as part of systemic human
rights violations amid the country's civil war, a U.N. report released
Friday said.
"The report contains harrowing accounts of civilians
suspected of supporting the opposition, including children and the
disabled, killed by being burned alive, suffocated in containers, shot,
hanged from trees or
cut to pieces," the U.N. High Commissioner for
Human Rights office said in a statement. "Credible sources indicate
groups allied to the government are being allowed to rape women in lieu
of wages but opposition groups and criminal gangs have also been preying
on women and girls."
"The scale and types of sexual violence, primarily by government SPLA
forces and affiliated militia, are described in searing, devastating
detail, as is the almost casual, yet calculated, attitude of those
slaughtering civilians and destroying property and livelihoods. However,
the quantity of rapes and gang-rapes described in the report must only
be a snapshot of the real total. This is one of the most horrendous
human rights situations in the world, with massive use of rape as an
instrument of terror and weapon of war, yet it has been more or less off
the international radar," said U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights
Zeid Ra`ad Al Hussein.
The report notes the United Nations recorded 1,300 reports of rape in
five months in 2015, in one part of South Sudan, the oil-rich Unity
state.
The report also includes eyewitness accounts of the slaying of
children, gang rapes of women by soldiers, and the deliberate
destruction of civilian buildings and other property, and notes at least
seven journalists were killed in 2015 and a number of activists were
arrested.
"Civil society activists, human rights defenders, humanitarian
actors, journalists and print media, and even U.N. staff members have
been the subject of threats, intimidation, harassment, detention and in
some instances death by the government," the report says, recommending
further monitoring of the situation by the U.N. Human Rights Council,
and installation of a procedure to report on South Sudan's human rights
situation and progress toward accountability.
UPI
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