On S
Sudan, ICP
Asked
UN of Threat in
Jonglei, Now
UNMISS Answers,
Here
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Exclusive Series
UNITED
NATIONS, July 10 – The
continuing failure of the UN's
billion dollar mission in
South Sudan was exemplified on
June 8 and 9, when Inner City
Press asking about censorship
and new attacks, and the UN
had nothing, nothing at all.
See the UN's June 9 transcript:
, and below. On July 7, Inner
City Press asked, transcript here: Inner
City Press: In South
Sudan, the Government itself
has expressed concern about
threats to residents of
Jonglei Province saying that
people from Equatoria should
leave or face, I guess,
death. So, I'm wondering
what is UNMISS [United Nations
Mission in South Sudan] aware
of this and what are they
doing to protect Equatorians
in Jonglei, given this public
threat.
Spokesman: Let me check
with the Mission. But,
what I mean… we have said
repeatedly and expressed our
concern at the continued
threats of violence against
civilians and the actual
violence against civilians
based on people's ethnicity.
Three days
later, the UN sent this, which
we publish in full: "In
response to your question on
South Sudan on Friday, here is
what we can say: The UN
Mission in South Sudan has
urged youth of all ethnic
groups to abide by the spirit
of President Salva Kiir’s
Independence Day speech on
Sunday in which he stated
unequivocally that 'war is not
an option.' It follows threats
made against people from the
Equatoria region who are
currently living in Bor and
then retaliatory messages
allegedly made by Equatorian
youth against Dinka Bor youth.
The Mission advocated for the
local authorities to respond
appropriately to what is a law
and order issue. UNMISS
condemns these threats and
welcomes the commitment by
local authorities to
investigate these acts of
intimidation and to take legal
action should it be
necessary." All right, then.
From June 8: Inner City Press:
I wanted to ask about this
report in South Sudan of
renewed attacks. The
rebels say that they killed
14. Some people have a
higher number. Since
there's a mission there,
what's the mission's
calculation of how many people
killed and who did it?
Spokesman:
I did not receive an update
from the mission today on the
latest findings.
Inner City Press: And
what about on this issue of
blocking foreign journalists
from reporting? Regional
groups…
Spokesman: We're looking
into it, obviously. But
I think, as I said yesterday,
we stand firmly for the rights
of journalists to report and
especially in a crisis such as
South Sudan and where the UN
has such a large presence.
Canned. The UN's South Sudan
Panel of Experts report,
obtained by Inner City Press
and put online on April 22 by
Inner City Press on Patreon
here, details among
other things asset freeze and
travel ban violations as well
as weapons sales
involving current and recent
members of the UN Security
Council. Now we publish this
internal UNMISS situation
report, leaked to Inner City
Press by insiders concerned
about the UN's cover ups given
the UN's lack of transparency
and attempts to censor,
despite the situation in South
Sudan: "“For your eyes only:
Rumbek reported that following
hostilities and revenge
killing associated with cattle
raiding in Pacong, the road
from Rumbek to Pacong (Leg of
Rumbek-Yirol road) has been
declared "Grey" effective 06
May 2017. Malakal reported
that unconfirmed information
indicates that SPLA around
Pagak are planning to launch
an offensive attack to reclaim
the area, thus the Field
Security Office is monitoring
the situation. The deployment
of additional auxiliary troops
to Aburoc (Upper Nile) has
been completed. NSTR from the
sensitive areas Leer, Pibor,
Kudok, Tonga and Kaka. SOC
DO.” When is monitoring (the
run-up to) an offensive attack
enough? UNderreported by
UNMISS: Bor - Murle attacks
and cattle raiding. We'll have
more on this. On May 5 the UN
Security Council issued a
statement about the attack on
the UN base in Leer, which did
not mention the UN's off the
book "temporary" protection
area there, see below. From
the UNSC statement: "The
members of the Security
Council strongly condemned the
attack against the United
Nations Mission in the
Republic of South Sudan
(UNMISS) on 3 May in Leer,
South Sudan. The members
of the Security Council
expressed appreciation for the
actions taken by UNMISS
peacekeepers to repel the
attack. " On May 2 Inner City
Press as UN spokesman Stephane
Dujarric about allegations
against the UN Mission itself,
UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: in
South Sudan, the SPLA (Sudan
People’s Liberation Army) in
Opposition is claiming that
UNMISS (United Nations Mission
in South Sudan) airlifted some
Government soldiers out while
they were in the middle of,
they say, attacking
non-Dinkas, and so they’re
questioning the
impartiality. But also,
I just wanted to get from you,
did UNMISS… has UNMISS moved
SPLA soldiers? And, if
so, why? They also say,
more generally, that… that…
that the UNMISS is not
investigating the actions of
its own peacekeepers that may
harm people.
Spokesman: I don’t
really understand that last
part. I think UNMISS
through… if you look… if you
look at what the Mission has
done through the [Patrick]
Cammaert report and others, I
think we’ve been as
transparent as possible into
the activities and the work of
the peacekeepers and flagging
the issues that may rise when
they have. On your sec…
on your first question, we’re
aware, we’ve seen the reports,
and we’re looking into it
currently.
Six hours
later, nothing. The UN Mission
UNMISS, which has yet to
address the issues in it, put
out this statement: "The first
elements of the Regional
Protection Force (RPF) of the
United Nations Mission in
South Sudan (UNMISS) have
started to arrive in the
country. The RPF Headquarters
has already been established
in Juba under the leadership
of Brigadier General Jean
Mupenzi from Rwanda. In
addition, an advance party of
a Construction Engineering
Company from Bangladesh
arrived on 20 April bringing
essential equipment to begin
the preparation of
accommodation and working
areas for the RPF in Juba.
Regional troops from Rwanda
will follow in June and July.
Some other specialist
capacities which are
unavailable in the region will
be provided by troop
contributing countries from
other UN Member States
including Nepal and Pakistan.
In line with UN Security
Council Resolution 2304 (2016)
and in cooperation with the
Transitional Government of
National Unity, the 4,000
peacekeepers of the RPF,
commanded by Brigadier General
Mupenzi, will be based in Juba
to bolster the Mission’s
capacity to advance the safety
and security of
civilians.
The Transitional Government of
National Unity confirmed its
unconditional consent to the
deployment of the force in a
communiqué to the UN Security
Council on 30 November 2016.
The RPF will provide
coordinated protection to key
facilities in Juba. It will
also provide protection to the
main routes into and out of
the city. It will
strengthen the security of UN
protection of civilians’ sites
and other UN premises.
The deployment of the RPF, to
be staged over coming months,
will free existing UNMISS
peacekeepers to extend their
presence to conflict-affected
areas beyond Juba."
The Experts
report for example states that
" an IL-76 transport aircraft
departed from Kharkiv,
Ukraine, on or about 27
January 2017, bound for
Gulu, Uganda. The
aircraft manifest indicated
that it contained two L-39
jets and engines
provided by Musket OU, a
company based in Tallinn, that
had been overhauled and
that the flight was operated
by the Ministry of
Defense of Ukraine"
The report also states: "128.
The Panel has recently
received documentation from a
confidential source that
details a contract, signed in
June 2014 by two National
Security Service officers,
for a company based in
Seychelles to provide weapons
to the Internal Security
Bureau of the Service, headed
by Akol Koor. The contract sum
is for $264 million,
covering a very large
quantity of heavy weapons,
small arms and ammunition.
Among the items listed are:
(a) 30 T55 tanks;
(b) 20 ZU-23
anti-aircraft weapons;
(c) 5,000 rounds of T55
tank ammunition;
(d) 10 BM-21 “Grad”
rocket systems;
(e) 10,000 122-mm M21OF
missiles;
(f) 3,000 S8 rockets for
MI-24 helicopters;
(g) 20 million rounds of
7.62x39-mm ammunition;
(h) 50,000 AK-47 assault
rifles;
(i) 12,000 RPG-7 rounds.
129. The Panel is
investigating this order to
establish whether it was
executed as outlined."
Also referenced are sales from
"Egypt and Middle East
for Development for the
provision of 'Panthera armored
vehicles.' The number of
vehicles and the technical
specifications are not
outlined in the contract, but
the stated value of the
contract was $7,187,500.
The company contracted
to provide the vehicles is
registered in Egypt and
based in Cairo. The Panel has
established that an individual
involved with the
company has extensive
connections with senior SPLA
personnel. The
individual outlined these
connections to the Panel and
confirmed that he had
facilitated meetings in
Lebanon in 2015 for a
delegation of South
Sudanese military officers
working for Malong."
The report refers to the
"Spanish investigation" --
Spain only recently came off
the Security Council,
after misusing its two
years. As to asset freezes and
travel bans, Peter Gadet took
an ownership stake in a
trading company, and was in
Khartoum at the time of
the report, according to the
UN Experts. On April 26 Inner
City Press asked the new
affable UN SRSG David Shearer
about the weapons; he deferred
back to the Panel, noting that
UN Radio had recently cleared
Egypt of flying in jets.
Periscope of Q&A here.
Similarly, he said he was
unaware of any borehole damage
or power wire cutting by SPLA
in Leer, while saying the UN
does not want to "attract"
people to its off the books
Protection Area there. We'll
have more on this. With UN
Peacekeeping facing budget
cuts, it still cannot get it
together to report on abuses
by governments, like the Salva
Kiir government in South
Sudan, even abuses to it own
peacekeepers. In South Sudan
Inner City Press is informed,
including by a UN
whistleblower, that the UN
learned that Kiir's SPLA
soldiers intentionally
destroyed the pipe from the
drinking water borehole, and
the power cable, that supply
the UN Troop Contributing
Country “Temporary Operating
Base” in Leer. Cutting off
water, to peacekeepers, is a
war crimes. But today's UN
says nothing. On April 10
Inner City Press asked the
UN's holdover spokesman
Stephane Dujarric for UN
Peacekeeping chief Jean Pierre
Lacroix to hold a question and
answer session (and not just a
private drinking or “toasting”
session with selected scribes)
and Dujarric laughed it off.
Dujarric then refused to take
Inner City Press' question
about Burundi, another UN
failure, after engaging
in a long back and forth about
“Sex in the City.” This is
today's UN. We
note that
Lacroix is
slated
mid-week to
only selected
correspondents,
those to whom
Dujarric
without any
written notice
lent "his"
briefing room,
raise a glass,
apparently off
the record: “a
meet and greet
with the new
Under-Secretary-General
for
Peacekeeping
Operations,
Mr.
Jean-Pierre
Lacroix, on
Wednesday,
April 12th
from 5:00 -
6:00
pm...Please
attend for a
toast to
welcome the
new USG.”
Presumably
with drinking
water (unlike
the
peacekeepers
in Leer) and
more.
We'll have more on Leer, and
more on Wau as well. Watch
this site.
Nor will the UN
answer questions, including on
ethnic cleansing. On April 10
Inner City Press asked UN
holdover spokesman Stephane
Dujarric, Video
here, UN transcript
here: Inner City
Press: I saw this, the
note of correspondents from
UNMISS talking about this
ambush. It's sort of
implying that it began with an
ambush of the army, and then
the army fought back.
But, I've also seen an e-mail
from… in UNMISS that the SPLA
[Sudan People’s Liberation
Army] was using tanks as early
as 7 a.m. on Saturday on this
road to Bagari. So, I
wanted to know, I guess it
gives rise to, like, if the
UN… if the UN is going to now
come out and say they were
ambushed, were they, in fact,
advancing on… on enemy
positions with tanks…?
And, if so, what… what sort of
is the… UNMISS's reporting, I
guess, procedure…?
Spokesman: I… you,
obviously, have access to
e-mails that I don't. My
sense and my hope is that the
information that is verified
is then reported on. I
can only go by what the
Mission told me. I
would, if you have further
questions for them and
details, I would urge you to
get in touch with them
directly. Our concern,
obviously, is for the status
of the civilians in the area
who are, once again, caught in
fighting. I mean, as you
said, we've already seen 16
bodies in the hospital, a
small increase in the number
of people who are seeking, who
are seeking shelter. So,
we'll have more patrols in the
coming days. And, as
we're able to report, we shall
do so.
Inner City Press:
Overall, can… overall, does
the UN believe that… that…
that this and other incidents
involve the, the
Dinka-dominated Government and
its associated militias…
trying to conduct ethnic
cleansing of other groups… in
South Sudan?
Spokesman: I'm not… I'm
not in a position to say that
one way or another.
Inner City
Press published this leak from
the UN in South Sudan:
"Security Event: April
7: SPLA movement of
artillery and tanks towards
Baggari (30-40km to SE of Wau
town) began Friday evening
around 1800 and currently
ensconced in the Matadu area
on the outskirts of Wau town.
SPLA began shelling (using
tanks) as of 0700 Saturday and
it continued for an hour,
stopping for an hour, before
starting again. SPLA have also
blocked the road from Wau to
Baggari. Unconfirmed news that
helo gunships were in route as
back up from Juba
Headquarters. No response yet
from the SPLA-IO because
supposedly the SPLA have not
crossed into Baggari yet, but
could expect preparation for
what seems like inevitable
clashes. April 6: An
armed engagement between
unidentified groups was
reported in Majok area, Wau.
No information on casualties
was received. April 4: About
18:00 hours in Wau, drivers of
UNMISS contracted trucks
travelling from Juba to Wau
witnessed heavy fighting
between SPLA and alleged
unknown armed group in Mapel
(about 30 kilometers from
Wau). The SPLA at the
checkpoint in Mapel allowed
the drivers to proceed after
paying a fee and they arrived
at UNMISS Field Office at
about 20:30 hours unharmed.
However, they reported that
they saw about four corpses
lying along the road at the
scene of the fighting. April
3: unknown armed men
operating in Kuajena area
attacked and killed one SPLA
officer in the vicinity of
Mapel; on 04 Apr 17, some
armed cattle keepers launched
an attacked on a local
population April 2: During
evening hours in Wau, armed
clashes were reported between
SPLA and an unknown armed
group in the area of Kuajena
about 80 kilometers south-east
of Wau Town. The incident took
place on the road between Wau
and Tonj (Warrap) and casualty
figures are not known."
Hour after
publishing the above, and a
review of Antonio Guterres'
first 100 days including on
South Sudan, UNMISS issued
this: "The UN Mission in South
Sudan (UNMISS) has been
informed that a number of
government SPLA soldiers were
killed in an ambush on Sunday
to the south of the town of
Wau in the north-west of the
country.
Fighting then spread to Wau.
The Mission mounted two
patrols into Wau on Monday and
said it had observed the
bodies of 16 civilians in a
hospital. There were ten
people who had been injured.
Additional patrols are planned
for Tuesday.
Eighty-four people have
arrived at the UNMISS POC
site, while an influx of at
least 3,000 people at a
Catholic church in the town,
mostly women and children, has
been reported.
The fighting follows the
movement of SPLA troops, tanks
and equipment towards the
south-western part of Wau late
last week."
On
April 4, Inner City Press at
the day's UN noon briefing
asked, UN
transcript here:
Inner City Press:
Thought you might have
something at the top on this
attack by the South Sudanese
army on Pajok inside South
Sudan, leading to, they say,
3,000 refugees crossing the
border. What's the UN
doing to protect
civilians? And does it
have any statement on SPLA
[Sudan People’s Liberation
Army] forces…?
Spokesman: We're in
touch with our mission in
South Sudan, and we're trying
to get a bit more information
on what happened. Okay.
Seven
hours later, nothing. Even
after the UN declared famine
in South Sudan, the Salva Kiir
government responded by
raising the fee on the
international NGOs fighting
the famine to $10,000 (since
dropped). Then we learned of
an UNreported "Temporary
Protection Area" next to the
UN base in Leer, kept quiet by
the UN in order to stay in
good with the Kiir
government.It is shameful -
and dangerous. On March 30,
the so-called Troika of the
US, UK and Norway issued a
joint statement, here.
Children
of families who fled Kiir
government threats and
violence and live in the UN
base in Juba were supposed to
be allowed to taken the
national secondary school test
inside the base on March 6.
But the government now says
they must leave the base to be
tested - and UNMISS and
UNICEF, which runs the schools
in the bases, have said
nothing. More cover up
for Kiir: shameful.
On March 7, after
reporting on the off the books
"Temporary Protection Area" in
Leer, Inner City Press asked
the UN's holdover deputy
spokesman Farhan Haq about it.
Video
here.
Haq said everything is
included. On March 8, Inner
City Press asked again, and
about the UN's silence on Kiir
ordering children to leave the
UNMISS camps to take tests. Video
here,
UN transcript here:
Inner City Press:
I'd asked you yesterday about
this temporary protection area
near the UN base in Leer in
South Sudan. And I'm
wondering, you seemed to say
it was included in the
reports, but I still don't see
it. But, I have another
question, which has to do with
the base…
Deputy Spokesman: Yeah,
actually on that, before you
go ahead, I got this just
now. Let me just
see. And it says… yes,
the Temporary Operating Base
in Leer was established in
November 2015, following a
resurgence in violence in the
area. In consultation
with humanitarian partners who
withdrew due to insecurity,
destruction and the looting of
their premises and vital
supplies, the temporary base
was established to mitigate
against the deteriorating
situation in South and Central
Unity. Leer has a
Temporary Protected Area,
which is protected by UNMISS
[United Nations Mission in the
Republic of South
Sudan]. It not a
full-fledged protection site,
as it is not equipped with
camp managers or full
humanitarian services, neither
of which are present in
Leer. UNMISS forces have
been providing medical
services — they have delivered
48 babies — and water to the
displaced population.
The Leer Temporary Protection
Area is not represented in the
Protection of Civilians Site
Update because there are no
official figures for the
population, as our
humanitarian partners have not
conducted biometric
registration nor a reliable
head count.
Inner City Press: About
the base in Juba. I'm
told that South Sudan is
conducting a… a secondary
school test. They began
Monday. And they were
supposed to conduct them for
the students and youths living
in the camp inside the
camp. But, at the last
minute, the Government said,
no, you have to come outside
of the camp to do it.
And several hundred children
are not going out of the camp
because they feel unsafe with
the Government and its
national security service
overseeing their test.
What I'm wondering is, what is
the role of the UN in
there? I'm told that
UNICEF [United Nations
Children’s Fund] runs the
schools. Does the UN
have any comment on the
Government, at the last
minute, switching and
requiring people under the
UN's protection to come out of
the camp, their fears, and why
haven't they taken this up
with the Government?
Deputy Spokesman: Well,
I'll see whether UNICEF has
anything to say with that…
about that, but you can also
check with our UNICEF
colleagues.
Question: Also
UNMISS. I mean, it's an
UNMISS Protection of Civilians
camp. So, if the
Government is ordering people
to leave UN protection camps,
isn't that of concern to
UNMISS or to even higher up in
the building?
Deputy Spokesman: We'd
have to see whether that's
what they're doing. I'm
just going by your report on
that. All right.
Have a good afternoon,
everyone.
UN
March
7 transcript here:
Inner City Press:
I wanted to ask you about
South Sudan. I’ve become
aware that there’s, next to
the UN base in Leer, something
called a temporary protection
area that has… is protecting
civilians, but it’s not
included in the… in the… this
Protection of Civilians weekly
release that’s put out by
UNMISS (United Nations Mission
in South Sudan) so… whereas
something called an adjacent
area in Wau is included.
So some people there say this
is kind of a… kind of an
off-the-books or
under-the-table. Can
you… maybe you’ll know it from
the podium or I’d actually
like you today to get an
answer whether there is a
temporary protection area in
Leer and, if so, why it was
chosen not to include it in
the… the disclosures that the
UN puts out of people it
protected? And what
would happen if people there
were actually attacked by
Government forces that they’re
seeking to flee from?
Deputy Spokesman: Well,
we do disclose all of the
various Protection of
Civilians sites, as well as
adjacent areas, so that
information is provided.
Depending upon what the
facilities are, we… you know,
we provide different updates
if other areas are set
up. I don’t have any
particular information about
any site in Leer, but we can
check.
From the
UN's March 6 transcript:
Inner City Press:
Mr. O'Brien was in South
Sudan. There's a
document that's being
circulated online [h/t/ Jason
Patinkin, here]
that the Government is now
charging NGOs a $10,000
business license fee.
This comes in the wake
of the famine
determination. Does OCHA
[Office for the Coordination
of Humanitarian Affairs] or
the UN have any response to
the Government increasing its
fees on groups trying to
address the drought?
Deputy Spokesman: Well,
like I just said a few seconds
ago about this, Mr. O'Brien
has spoken to the press
following his visit. One
of the points he made is that
aid workers continue to face
multiple obstacles to the
delivery of humanitarian
assistance, including active
hostilities, access denials,
and bureaucratic
impediments. And the
basic point is, as he said, we
need the access and the funds
to save even more lives.
Inner City Press: Right,
so this includes this $10,000
fee?
Deputy Spokesman: It
includes all bureaucratic
impediments, yes.
With the UN speaking more
about South Sudan, including a
four-speaker press conference
on February 22 manipulated
by holdover spokesman Stephane
Dujarric, its reflexive
covering up for the Salva Kiir
government continues. Inner
City Press has been sent, by
outraged whistleblowing UN
staff, the following internal
directive, which pretends that
those robbing UN staff are NOT
in fact with the government.
Finding no answers from
"spokesman" Dujarric even to
questions on which he has been
given
an if-asked answer by
those above him in the UN
system, we publish it in full.
"Ref:
025/SB/02/23/2017 It has come
to the attention of UN
Security that criminals in
civil clothes operating in
pairs or individually and
purporting to be personnel of
Host Government National
Security are operating around
prominent supermarkets/stores
in Juba and targeting UN/INGO
personnel for harassment and
robbery. These individuals
accost unsuspecting staff
members coming out of the
supermarket and flash
identification cards as
personnel of National
Security. They immediately
accuse staff members of having
gone to change money inside
the supermarket and seek to
search the pockets of staff
members to determine if any
currency exchange has been
made or not. It is their
assessment that staff members
with more than 5000 SSP must
have changed money. Reports
received indicate that this
scenario is continuously
playing out and staff members
are falling victims to these
criminals.
The following
advisory are recommended to
ensure the safety and security
of staff:
Do not carry
large sums of money on you
whilst moving in town. Staff
members should not agree to be
subjected to bodily search
except when their lives are in
danger. Park UN
vehicles at designated car
park inside the supermarket if
one is available. Staff
members should avoid the
temptation of changing money
in supermarkets as some of
these venders may be
collaborating with the
criminals. As much as possible
avoid driving alone in town.
Staff members driving alone
are more vulnerable targets.
Always remember to drive with
doors locked and windows
closed. Never leave the car
unless forced to do so. Do not
display items (phones, laptop-
bag, handbags etc) openly in
your car. Put them on the
floor, under the seat or
preferable in the boot of
vehicle. Avoid argument
and struggle with an armed
robber. Report all security
incidents, unusual
happenings/activities, or
events to the SIOC Duty
Officer on 0922777765 or
Juliet Sierra Base immediately
and pass as much as possible
information (who, where, when)
to the duty officer."
The
UN system seems intent on
covering up the disappearance
of South South opposition
figures in Kenya, where Ban
Ki-moon made his own son in
law Siddharth Chatterjee the
UN Resident Coordinator.
On February
7, Inner City Press asked
Stephane Dujarric, Ban's old
spokesman, still speaking for
the UN, transcript
here:
Inner City Press:
You talked about South Sudan,
and I wanted to ask you, are
aware of an order among the UN
Humanitarian Air Service to
basically try to discourage
Kenyan nationals from going to
any IO-controlled territory
because of the capture of IO
officials in Kenya?
[Cross talk]
Spokesman: No...
Dujarric
referred to one of the UN
agencies the transition
process at which is entirely
murky. So here now is
the document leaked to Inner
City Press, put
on Scribd here.
UNHAS
Document Leaked to Inner City Press
Has UN Discouraging Kenyans' Travel
to SPLA-I/O Areas in South Su...
by Matthew
Russell Lee on Scribd
This comes
at a time when the failures of
Herve Ladsous' UNMISS are
being raised, including in
Washington, and is published
in light of danger and the UN
Spokesman refusing to answer
questions. We'll have more on
this.
On January 11
after South Sudan said that it
will not, in fact, accept the
4,000 new peacekeepers for the
Regional Protection Force,
Inner City Press asked UK
Ambassador Matthew Rycroft
about it. Video
here; UN transcript
here:
Inner City Press:
On South Sudan, the government
say they’re not going to take
the regional protection force.
What do you think the Council
can or should do?
Amb Rycroft: They
committed earlier to accept
the regional protection force.
They are obliged to accept it,
given Security Council
decisions, and we call on them
again to accept that regional
protection force in the
interest of longer term
stability in South Sudan.
When the
UN Security
Council members
met about South
Sudan on December
15, the best they
could do was
extend the mandate
of the UNMISS
mission for a
single day. Even
then, there was
already news of
UNMISS having
given arms to
warlord, or “rebel
general,” James
Koang.
Inner City
Press asked US
Ambassador
Samantha Power
about this on
December 16 and
she said she
hadn't read it. On
December 19, even
while fielding a
pre-picked
question on South
Sudan, Power still
refused to answer.
Video
here.
***
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