By AFP
In Summary
Warring forces in SouthSudan
traded blame Wednesday for the crash of a UN helicopter in which three
crew died, although investigations have yet to confirm if it was shot
down.
The helicopter crashed Tuesday some 10 kilometres
(six miles) from the northern oil town of Bentiu, one of the worst-hit
areas in the civil war that has roiled the young country for more than
eight months.
A UN team was investigating the wreckage of the
Mi-8 helicopter on Wednesday, but have made no comment on the cause of
the crash, in which three were killed and one wounded.
The crew members were reportedly all Russian, according to the UN.
Army spokesman Philip Aguer said rebels "shot it down", but provided no further evidence.
Rebel spokesman Mabior Garang, son of SouthSudan's first president John Garang who died in a helicopter crash in 2005, dismissed the claims as "malicious allegations".
He said rebel troops nearby had "heard a loud
explosion, and upon investigation found that an aircraft had crashed",
but claimed it landed in an area controlled by the army.
"The area in which the plane was reportedly shot
down is government-held territory, if indeed the aircraft was shot
down," Garang said.
Thousands of people have been killed and more than
1.8 million have fled a civil war sparked by a power struggle between
President Salva Kiir and his sacked deputy Riek Machar.
Rebel forces in Unity are led by warlord Peter Gadet, who has been slapped with sanctions for atrocities by both the United States and the European Union.
"The plane was shot by forces of Riek Machar under
Peter Gadet," Aguer said, adding the army had also sent a team to
investigate.
The town of Bentiu has been badly damaged in heavy fighting between government and rebel forces.
Earlier this month government troops there opened
fire on a UN peacekeeping base sheltering 40,000 civilians, wounding a
child and spraying bullets across the camp, during celebrations to mark a
holiday.
Rebel forces last week seized a UN helicopter carrying a ceasefire monitors.
UN cargo helicopters are vital to supplying
peacekeeping bases and providing food for civilians, with aid agencies
warning of the risk of famine should fighting continue.
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