NAIROBI
As
East African mediators attempt to push South Sudan's government and
rebels into signing a truce, analysts and diplomats fear it may already
be too late to halt the war.
Regional nations are
trying to broker a ceasefire but have already been drawn into the brutal
five-week-old conflict, with Ugandan troops battling alongside
government forces loyal to President Salva Kiir.
The
longer it continues, the more "those who have remained on the sidelines
are increasingly pulled into the conflict," US Assistant Secretary of
State for African Affairs Linda Thomas-Greenfield warned in a statement
this week.
"Each day that the conflict continues, the risk of all-out civil war grows as ethnic tensions rise," she added.
Many
say it already is a civil war, pitting a conventional army against a
loose alliance of mutinied army units and ethnic militia. Each side has
been deploying heavy weapons, fighting has been fierce and protracted,
and key towns have been changing hands each week.
South
Sudanese government forces backed by Ugandan troops on Saturday
recaptured the strategic town of Bor, defeating an army of thousands of
rebels, officials said. (READ: South Sudan troops retake strategic town from rebels)
A
day earlier the United Nations' top human rights envoy Ivan Simonovic,
who has gathered reports of mass killings, sexual violence and
widespread destruction, said South Sudan was now in a state of "internal
armed conflict" and that the laws of war were applicable.
Talks
in neighbouring Ethiopia are being mediated by the East African
regional bloc Igad, even though Uganda is a key member and the rebels
have expressed concern about its neutrality.
Rebel
chief Riek Machar has accused Ugandan fighter jets of targeting him, and
is also deeply critical of suggestions that Sudan, another Igad member,
could deploy troops to help Juba protect oil fields from the rebels.
Kenya,
which sent in troops to evacuate citizens, also warned in a
confidential briefing document this week of the "internationalisation"
of the conflict.
Rebels from Sudan's war-torn Darfur
region, nervous of a pact between their old allies in Juba and their
enemy in Khartoum, are also reportedly operating in oil-rich border
zones.
The crisis on the ground, therefore, seems to be
moving faster than the peace talks and out of the control of the
politicians who sparked it.
"We are heartbroken to see
what was purely a political problem... quickly slide into an ethnic one
on a rapid and frightening scale," read a statement from the South Sudan
Council of Churches, an influential coalition of religious leaders.
Violence
is rooted in decades-old grievances between former rebels turned
political leaders, combined with unhealed wounds left over from the
two-decades long civil war that preceded South Sudan's independence from
Khartoum in 2011.
CYCLE OF REVENGE
Many
appear deeply pessimistic that even if a political deal is struck, the
conflict pitting members of Kiir's Dinka people - the country's largest
group - against Machar's Nuer has reached a point of no return.
"Handshakes,
smiles and a mere political settlement between the two parties will not
set South Sudan on a path towards truth, sustainable peace, democracy
and the rule of law," wrote David Deng from the South Sudan Law Society,
a civil society organisation, and human rights lawyer Elizabeth Deng.
"The
two parties should be compelled to submit themselves and their
supporters to an independent investigation into the crimes committed,"
they wrote in a joint commentary on the crisis.
And
Princeton Lyman, a former US special envoy to the country, said in a
report for the United States Institute of Peace think tank that the
talks "cannot simply return the country to the previous status quo."
"For
lasting peace, the negotiating parties and mediators will need to reach
beyond national political elites and those bearing arms and invite
active involvement of the international community," he wrote.
On
the ground, the pattern appears to be sliding towards that of the
1983-2005 southern civil war when Sudan was a united nation, when the
government controlled towns but multiple rebel forces claimed swathes of
countryside.
"There is no military solution," said the
group Citizens for Peace and Justice, a coalition of academics and
civil society leaders, calling the conflict "a crisis engulfing the
whole country".
Jok Madut Jok, a former senior
government official and academic now running the Sudd Institute, has
warned that "what started as a political confrontation between power
contenders... has now evolved into a military revenge and
counter-revenge" along ethnic lines.
Jok warned of civil war "should the IGAD-led initiative for a dialogue fail to produce a quick deal".
Kiir
could be "threatened with regional isolation if he shows any
intransigence, but little can be done to pressure Mr. Machar," Jok
added, saying the rebel leader has "very little to lose".
As
the number of those displaced by fighting touches half a million, those
affected say their dreams of building a new nation are shattered.
"We
thought we were dreaming of peace but now we are back in war, it's a
circle," said teacher Simon Thon, 31, who fled across the White Nile
river from fighting in the rebel-held town of Bor with his heavily
pregnant wife, who has since given birth to a boy under a tree.
"When
you hear your neighbour calling you, you go. What you do not expect is
for that neighbour to then start shooting to kill you... that is what
happened to us."
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