UNITED NATIONS
A United
Nations committee is weighing imposing sanctions on six senior
commanders from South Sudan, the first to face penalties over the
18-month war, diplomats said Friday.
A newly formed UN
sanctions committee on South Sudan is considering slapping an assets
freeze and global travel ban on the six military leaders from the
government and rebel sides, according to documents obtained by AFP.
They
are Major General Marial Chanuong Yol Mangok, commander of President
Salva Kiir's presidential guard; Lieutenant General Gabriel Jok Riak,
whose forces are fighting in Unity State; and Major General Santino Deng
Wol who led a military offensive through Unity State in May in which
children, women and old men were killed.
From the rebel
side, Major General Simon Gatwech Dual, the chief of the general staff,
is cited for leading offensives in Jonglei State as well as Major
General James Koang Chuol who led attacks in Upper Nile State and
General Peter Gadet, the rebels' deputy chief of staff for operations.
South
Sudan has been torn by fighting since December 2013 between forces
loyal to Kiir and rebels allied with his former deputy, Riek Machar.
The
world's newest nation is now in the throes of a dire humanitarian
crisis, with more than 2.5 million people facing severe food shortages.
The United Nations has repeatedly called on the two leaders to stop fighting and put South Sudan back on the path to peace.
More than 120,000 people are sheltering in UN bases in South Sudan.
The
Security Council threatened in March to impose sanctions on those who
obstruct peace and adopted a resolution to set up a committee to begin
work on the measures.
The six names would be the first to be considered by the committee which reports to the Security Council.
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