Landmines kill 5 and injure 21 in South Sudan’s Unity state

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By Bonifacio Taban Kuich

August 23, 2011 (BENTIU) – Two separate landmine blasts in South
Sudan’s Unity state have killed five and injured twenty over the
weekend according to witnesses and government officials. Rebel groups
were blamed for planting the mines.

A Toyota pickup land cruiser ran into a mine field in Rubkotna County
on Saturday resulting in three deaths and 15 people being seriously
injured, witnesses told Sudan Tribune.

On Sunday another public bus carrying 12 passengers from Bentiu town
heading to Nhialdiu hit landmines killing two and injuring six, state
Minister of Information and Communication Gideon Gatpan Thoar said on
Monday in Bentiu town.

Thoar said the government suspects a militia linked to Gai Yoach was
responsible. Yoach joined the South Sudan army (SPLA) from Sudan’s
Armed Forces (SAF) in August last year ahead of South Sudan’s
independence referendum.

Since a 2005 peace deal, former rebel group - the Sudan people
Liberation Army (SPLA) - have been the legal army in South Sudan and
its political wing - the SPLM - the ruling party.

South Sudan seceded in July but is riven with rebel groups who have
various grievances against the government. Juba accuses Khartoum of
backing the rebels. Sudan routinely denies the allegation.

Yoach who was formerly part of the Khartoum controlled SAF under
Colonel Wal Khan has in the past been accused of carrying out previous
attacks in Unity state.

On Sunday the governor of Unity State Taban Deng Gai, said laying the
landmines on the road to attack civilians was a crime against
humanity. Gai said that his government’s attempts to make peace with
Yoach had failed.

The Governor said that even Yoach’s stepson was among those killed in
Sunday’s attack.

VP Machar calls for peace

The vice president of the Republic of South Sudan Riek Machar
addressed Church congregations in Bentiu on Sunday in an attempt to
act as an agent of peace particularly in Upper Nile, Jonglei and Unity
states, which have been battered by conflicts between rebels and the
government.

Machar accused the groups of carrying out atrocities and planting
mines that kill and threaten the lives of innocent civilians in the
state.

He called upon all of Unity State to act as the agent of change to
bring peace to their communities. Machar added that “our problem as
people of Unity State must be solved by us”, he said, "we don’t need
anyone to come and tell us to behave well without applying our
responsibility as people of Unity State."

Machar strongly welcomed former rebel leader Peter Gatdet back into
the SPLA after he had rebelled against the government earlier this
year complaining that tribalism and nepotism were ruining the
government. Gatdet was responding to an amnesty offered by the
president of the Republic of South Sudan Salva Kiir.

(ST)

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