UNITED NATIONS
The UN Security
Council on Wednesday imposed sanctions on six commanders from South
Sudan, the first to be blacklisted in a country where 18 months of war
have brought horrific violence.
The six generals —
three from the government forces and three from the rebels — were
punished with a global travel ban and an assets freeze for their role in
the worsening conflict.
Britain, France and the United
States had put forward the six names to a newly formed sanctions
committee that was set up in March by the Security Council after a
string of failed successive ceasefires.
From the
government side, the three 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 an offensive through
Unity State in May in which children, women and old men were killed.
From
the rebels, the sanctions target Major General Simon Gatwech Dual,
chief of the general staff, Major General James Koang Chuol, who led
attacks in Upper Nile State, and General Peter Gadet, the rebels' deputy
chief of staff for operations.
"As the members of the
Security Council demonstrated today, those who commit atrocities and
undermine peace will face consequences," US Ambassador Samantha Power
said in a statement.
Power called on both sides to "put
aside their self-serving ambitions, end the fighting, and engage in
negotiations to establish a transitional government."
She warned that additional sanctions could be imposed.
South
Sudan has been torn by fighting since December 2013 between forces
loyal to Kiir and rebels allied with his former deputy, Riek Machar, and
the violence has imploded along ethnic lines.
EXECUTION
The
world's newest nation is in the throes of a dire humanitarian crisis,
with more than 2.5 million people facing severe food shortages and two
million driven from their homes.
A recent report by the
UN mission in South Sudan described horrific violence in the latest
fighting in Unity state, where witnesses said the army gang-raped girls
and torched them alive in huts.
At least seven ceasefires have been signed and broken during successive rounds of talks.
Among
the more prominent military leaders is Mangok, the commander of the
presidential guard, who oversaw the execution of ethnic Nuer civilians
when fighting broke out in December 2013, according to UN documents seen
by AFP.
The civilians were buried in mass graves in and around Juba.
Gatwech
Dual, the rebels' chief of general staff, is cited for targeting women,
children and civilians, ordering fighters under his command to "not
make any distinctions between different Dinka tribes and should kill all
of them."
The UN committee had set a 1900 GMT deadline
for objections to be raised to the sanctions request amid some
expectation that Russia and China could refuse to endorse the move.
But the deadline passed without objections, which means under UN rules that the request was approved.
Russia said it decided to back sanctions because the African Union had come out in support of the move.
"Still
we consider the sanctions counterproductive as they do not contribute
to the peace process," said Alexey Zaytsev, spokesman for the Russian
mission.
The International Crisis Group had come out
against the sanctions proposal, arguing that the six generals were not
responsible for the failure to reach an agreement and warning that their
support for any future deal could be jeopardised.
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