South Sudan is on brink of famine

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Aid workers in South Sudan are finding it hard to operate because roadblocks are suddenly being erected in some areas, the UN's top official for humanitarian assistance has said.

The UN warned two and a half million people are on the brink of famine, and food stocks in some places could run out by next month.

The organization also said more than six million people, over half of South Sudan's population, need aid.

The situation is "worrying" as demands are being made of humanitarian workers before their convoys are allowed to proceed, Valerie Amos told reporters in the capital Juba on Monday.

"Roadblocks are just being suddenly established and demands being made of humanitarian workers that they pay to allow the convoys to go through," the AP news agency reported her as saying.

"This is reflection of the fact that the command and control mechanisms that should exist are breaking down."
Many aid workers risk being kidnapped and have seen their supplies and equipment looted, she said.

Plagued by violence

South Sudan has been plagued by violence since December 2013 when fighting erupted between pro-government forces and soldiers loyal to former Vice President Riek Machar.

Both sides have been accused of human rights violations in the year old conflict, and a senior UN official demanded accountability on Monday.

Ivan Simonovic, the assistant secretary-general for human rights who just returned from South Sudan, said it will not be easy to improve the security and justice systems because 70 percent of the police force is illiterate and there are only 100 to 200 judges and a limited number of prosecutors.

In the current situation, he said, "it's very difficult to ensure necessary witness protection especially in high-profile cases".
Simonovic said there may be a need for prominent cases to include experts from outside South Sudan.

"In the meantime, I encourage confidence-building measures between the parties," he said.

"These would include free access to detainees; cooperation in tracing missing persons and the release of conflict-related detainees by both sides, hopefully under an all-for-all formula."

PHOTO CAPTION

Children play at a railway station camp, where refugees from South Sudan have stayed for four years, in Khartoum May 11, 2014.

Source: Aljazeera.com

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