Internally displaced people queue to register at a UN
refugee camp in Bentiu, Unity State ©Charles Lomodong (AFP)
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Over 300,000
South Sudanese civilians are without "life-saving aid" in the
northern battleground state of Unity, the United Nations said Monday, as it and
aid agencies pulled out due to heavy fighting.
The violence is some of the worst in the country's
17-month-old civil war, as government forces push south from the state capital
Bentiu into an opposition zone around the town of Leer, home to some of the
country's once lucrative oil fields.
AFP reports:
"Ongoing hostilities in Unity state have now
obliged all non-governmental organizations and UN agencies to evacuate staff
from Leer and other locations," UN aid chief in South Sudan Toby Lanzer
said in a statement.
"As a consequence, over 300,000 civilians who are
in need of emergency relief, including food aid and medical services, do not
currently have access to such life-saving assistance."
On Friday the UN said that up to 100,000 people had
been uprooted in the first week of May alone, following a marked spike in
hostilities.
Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said Saturday it was
forced to pull its foreign staff out of Leer and halt all medical services amid
fears the rebel-held town was about to come under "imminent attack"
from government forces.
The International Committee of the Red Cross has also
warned that escalating fighting between forces loyal to President Salva Kiir
and rebel leader Riek Machar was forcing thousands of civilians to flee for their
lives yet again.
Leer, the birthplace of Machar, was ransacked by
government forces in January 2014. Gunmen looted the MSF hospital, murdering
patients in their beds and razing the building to the ground.
MSF has since rebuilt the hospital, the only referral
facility in opposition areas.
South Sudan's civil war began in December 2013 and has
been characterized by ethnic massacres, rape and attacks on civilians and
medical facilities.
Peace talks in neighbouring Ethiopia have so far
failed to reach any lasting agreement, or even an effective ceasefire.
The violence, which has escalated into an ethnic
conflict involving multiple armed groups, has killed tens of thousands of
people in the world's youngest nation, which gained independence from Sudan in
2011.
It has also left over half of the country's 12 million
people in need of aid, with 2.5 million people facing severe food insecurity,
according to the UN.
"Renewed
violence in southern Unity comes at a time when stocks of food are depleted,
and precisely at the height of the traditional planting season when civilians
could be planting their crops in order to reap a harvest later this year,"
Lanzer added.
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