(Maybe Patrick Bond is more right than not when he says of oil, "leave 
it in the ground".

NY Times, Mar. 12 2016
In South Sudan, City of Hope Is Now City of Fear
By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN

JUBA, South Sudan — Diu Tut glanced up at the gates of the displaced 
persons camp where he lives and shook his head.

“I can’t go out there,” he said.

“Why not?” he was asked.

“Because of this,” he said, rubbing the soft tribal scars on his 
forehead that mark him as a member of the Nuer ethnic group. “It’s my 
death certificate.”

A lot of people in this town feel the same way. Juba, South Sudan’s 
capital — and this whole country, for that matter — has slid so far from 
where its people dreamed it would go.

The Republic of South Sudan is not even five years old, but already 
50,000 people have been killed in an ethnically driven civil war replete 
with mass rape, civilian massacres, countless people displaced, killings 
at hospitals and now children starving to death in sunshine-flooded 
pediatric wards, skin peeling off their little backs like paint chips 
flaking off old wood.

On paper, the war is supposed to be over. An agreement solidified last 
month calls for a cessation of hostilities, the formation of a joint 
security force and the end of the political feud that started the war. 
Riek Machar, the rebel leader accused of staging a coup attempt more 
than two years ago, is supposed to return to his position as vice president.

But most people here do not believe what’s on paper.

In the camp where Mr. Tut and tens of thousands of other displaced Nuer 
live, few feel safe enough to venture out, peace deal or not. The camp 
is on Juba’s outskirts and many camp dwellers have homes less than two 
miles away. They fled at the outbreak of the civil war, and even now 
they say they will be killed if they try to return.

Juba has turned into a messy city of great fear. Just five years ago, on 
the eve of independence, it was ebullient. After decades of war and 
millions of lives lost to free itself from Sudan, the nation was 
burdened with daunting problems, of course, but it was also brimming 
with promise. Flags flapped proudly in the air and a clock counted down 
the days to independence, decorated with the words “Free at Last.”

But even after billions of aid dollars, many roads remain dirt, covered 
by a thin, crunchy layer of crushed plastic water bottles. Boys on 
motorbikes putter past smoking piles of garbage. Pickup trucks packed 
with soldiers careen recklessly into traffic, the young men in back 
angrily shaking their machine guns at anyone unfortunate enough to cross 
their paths.

At night, shots ring out and people are killed.

The government chalks up Juba’s continuing violence to what it calls 
“unknown gunmen,” but there is little investigation. Most people believe 
the culprits are government soldiers, anyway. They just can’t say that 
too loudly for fear that they will be next.

On Friday, the United Nations said that all parties to the conflict had 
committed serious and systematic violence against civilians, but it 
singled out forces loyal to the government as the worst offenders.

The United Nations recorded gruesome accounts from civilians, including 
of women and children being hanged from trees, burned alive or shot and 
hacked to pieces with machetes. Churches, mosques and hospitals have 
come under attack, the United Nations said.

Much of the bloodshed is caused by the bitter, ethnically tinged rivalry 
between the government, led by members of the Dinka ethnic group, and 
Mr. Machar’s rebel alliance, made up of mostly Nuer. But some of the 
worst violence, such as the fighting last year that left chopped up body 
parts scattered across the swamps, was Nuer versus Nuer, grisly evidence 
of a society splintering deeper and deeper.

Before the civil war broke out in December 2013, South Sudan’s economy 
had one thing going for it: oil. But the oil fields soon became battle 
zones, and then the world oil price plummeted. On top of that, the oil 
deal South Sudan triumphantly signed with Sudan after splitting off from 
it in 2011 is not looking so great anymore.

When it comes to oil production, the two Sudans are hopelessly linked. 
The south is home to the biggest reserves; the north has the pipelines 
to export it.

Instead of splitting profits, South Sudan agreed to pay Sudan a flat fee 
for every barrel pumped through the northern pipeline. That transit fee, 
along with some other debt South Sudan has to repay to Sudan, amounts to 
around $25 a barrel. But with the global oil price hovering around $40 a 
barrel, South Sudan is now steadily draining its most precious resource 
for very little in return.

But it has few options. Nearly all of the government’s revenue is 
generated by oil, and at a time like this, the government can’t afford 
not to pay its soldiers.

Before South Sudan became independent, Sudan’s leaders tried everything 
in their power to prevent the south from breaking off. Oppression. 
Neglect. A vicious civil war, characterized by scorched villages and 
slave raids. When it became clear by the early 2000s that it could not 
win, Khartoum, Sudan’s capital, appealed to the court of world opinion, 
trying to persuade Western powers that the south was too poor, too 
uneducated and too divided to govern itself.

Sadly, many observers say, the chaos that has broken out in South Sudan 
since independence is very similar to what the northerners had been 
warning about all along. More than half a dozen cease-fires have been 
shattered. Though Mr. Machar has agreed to return as vice president, he 
has yet to do so, citing security concerns. Many people believe he is 
just stalling.

At the same time, South Sudan’s president, Salva Kiir, seems to be 
losing control.

Dressed in dark suits with his signature black cowboy hat (a gift from 
President George W. Bush), he is known as a decent and religious man but 
also as a bit of an enigma.

“It’s very difficult to pin down the personality of Kiir,” said James 
Solomon Padiet, a professor at Juba University. “Most of his decisions 
depend on who influences him at the moment he makes it.”

He said that Mr. Kiir had urged his generals to respect human rights but 
that when government troops committed atrocities, as they have over and 
over again, Mr. Kiir did not punish anyone.

“He says: ‘It’s on you. God will punish you,’ ” Mr. Padiet said.

Mr. Kiir also needs each and every one of those generals to stay in 
power, the professor added.

On a recent day, the waiting rooms outside Mr. Kiir’s office were 
crammed with high-ranking officials and other people hoping to meet with 
him, but he did not show up to work.

Juba is incredibly uncomfortable these days, with temperatures soaring 
into the triple digits and the air thick and sticky. People along the 
road hide under mango trees or in the shallow shadows cast by parked 
trucks, desperate for shade.

These are the last days of dizzying heat before the spring rains hit and 
shut down many roads. Aid organizations are racing to position emergency 
food for the nearly three million South Sudanese edging toward starvation.

“There’s massive access constraints, roadblocks everywhere, widespread 
extortion,” said Jonathan Veitch, head of Unicef’s South Sudan office. 
He said aid trucks had to run a gantlet of 56 armed checkpoints to 
deliver food to Bentiu, a conflict-hit area.

“It costs $2,000 in bribes,” he said. “Per truck!”

Aid organizations are begging for more money, but donors seem to be 
getting tired.

“Most people think they have seen this movie before,” said John 
Prendergast, co-founder of the Enough Project, an anti-genocide group.

The well-worn narrative of helpless, starving South Sudanese “wildly 
oversimplifies” the reality, he said.

“The real story,” he said, “is one of a falling out among kleptocratic 
thieves, whose self-enrichment free-for-all before and after 
independence led competing factions to use ethnicity as a mobilizer, 
which is the equivalent of aiming a flamethrower at an oil rig.”

In Juba’s displaced persons camp, people have little to do except mourn 
their losses — the loss of family, the loss of homes, the loss of 
freedom, the loss of hope.

Mr. Tut recently graduated from a business program. His books — “Public 
Administration,” an English grammar book and the Chinua Achebe novel “No 
Longer at Ease” — lie in a dusty stack on the dirt floor.

He said his best friend at university was a Dinka.

“We still talk on the phone sometimes,” he said, his voice trailing off. 
“But I haven’t seen him for months.”

Nick Cumming-Bruce contributed reporting from Geneva.
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