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Senior UN human rights official condemns deplorable rights situation in
South Sudan

JUBA (19 Feb.)

The UN Assistant Secretary-General for human rights,  Andrew Gilmour,
called for those committing  atrocity crimes in South Sudan to be held
accountable.“This is a war that has been waged against the men, women and
children of South Sudan,” he said in a statement at the end of a four-day
visit to South Sudan.“And the only way of ending this onslaught will be
when the perpetrators face consequences for what they are doing.”

Gilmour held meetings in Juba with the Minister of Foreign Affairs and
International Cooperation, the Minister of Information, the Chief of
General Staff of the SPLA, the Director General of the National Security
Service, representatives of the South Sudan Human Rights Commission, local
authorities, religious leaders, UN and humanitarian partners, as well as
NGOs, victims and civil society actors.

During his visit, Gilmour also travelled to Malakal, where he received
further information concerning the suffering of the civilian population in
the area.“Although this is the fourth time I’ve been in South Sudan since
2011, I wasn’t prepared for the shocking devastation I witnessed in Malakal
and even more by the clear pattern of systematic human rights violations
and abuses suffered by the population,” Gilmour said.

According to the statement, Andrew was informed of the appalling risks that
women, now living under UN protection, are forced to take in order to be
able to earn even the most meagre livelihood. “It is utterly abhorrent that
women in this area have to choose between getting raped or getting a
livelihood,” Gilmour said, “But this seems the brutal reality of what South
Sudan has become.”

In March 2016, the UN human rights office issued a detailed report which
documents the horrendous patterns of sexual violence in the country.

In his meetings with the authorities in Juba, Gilmour raised concerns about
the unspeakable human rights situation throughout the country.  He urged
the authorities to combat the worrying rise of hate speech and to do more
to protect human rights defenders.

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