Musings on politics, school, neighbors, culture, and the lack of culture.
Monday, August 15, 2016
Sudan today
The following is very important for multiple reasons. And in no particular order - the disdain held for Americans, not because they are American, but because of the attitude others hold toward the US government. You know, that government who has reset relations around the world and has created all types of friendship circles!
To the more serious issue of the abject failure of the UN, yet again.
I am never surprised, just bemused.
South Sudan Troops Raped, Beat Foreigners as U.N. Force Ignored Calls for Help: AP
byThe Associated Press
NAIROBI, Kenya — The soldier pointed his AK-47 at the female aid worker and gave her a choice.
"Either you have sex with me, or we make every man here rape you and then we shoot you in the head," she remembers him saying.
She didn't really have a choice. By the end of the evening, she had been raped by 15 South Sudanese soldiers.
On July 11, South Sudanese troops, fresh from winning a battle in the capital, Juba, over opposition forces,
went on a nearly four-hour rampage through a residential compound
popular with foreigners, in one of the worst targeted attacks on aid
workers in South Sudan's three-year civil war.
They shot dead a local journalist while forcing
the foreigners to watch, raped several foreign women, singled out
Americans, beat and robbed people and carried out mock executions,
several witnesses told The Associated Press.
For hours throughout the assault, the U.N.
peacekeeping force stationed less than a mile away refused to respond to
desperate calls for help. Neither did embassies, including the U.S.
Embassy.
The Associated Press interviewed by phone eight
survivors, both male and female, including three who said they were
raped. The other five said they were beaten; one was shot. Most insisted
on anonymity for their safety or to protect their organizations still
operating in South Sudan. AP does not identify victims of sexual
assault.
The accounts highlight, in raw detail, the
failure of the U.N. peacekeeping force to uphold its core mandate of
protecting civilians, notably those just a few minutes' drive away. U.N.
peacekeepers in Juba have already been accused of not acting to stop
the rapes of local women by soldiers outside the U.N.'s main camp and
within their sight last month.
The attack on the Terrain hotel complex shows
the hostility toward foreigners and aid workers by troops under the
command of South Sudan's President Salva Kiir, who has been fighting
supporters of rebel leader Riek Machar since civil war erupted in
December 2013. Both sides have been accused of abuses. The U.N. recently
passed a U.S. resolution to send more peacekeeping troops to protect
civilians.
Army spokesman Lul Ruai did not deny the attack
at the Terrain but said it was premature to conclude the army was
responsible. "Everyone is armed, and everyone has access to uniforms and
we have people from other organized forces, but it was definitely done
by people of South Sudan and by armed people of Juba," he said.
A report on the incident compiled by the
Terrain's owner at Ruai's request, seen by the AP, alleges that at least
five women were raped, torture, mock executions, beatings and looting.
An unknown number of South Sudanese women were also assaulted.
The attack came just as people in Juba were thinking the worst was over.
Throughout the weekend, bullets whizzed through
the Terrain compound, a sprawling complex with a pool, squash court and a
bar patronized by expats and South Sudanese elites. It is also in the
shadow of the U.N.'s largest camp in Juba.
By Monday, the government had nearly defeated
the forces under Machar, who fled the city. As both sides prepared to
call for a cease-fire, some residents of the Terrain started to relax.
"Monday was relatively chill," one survivor said.
What was thought to be celebratory gunfire was
heard. And then the soldiers arrived. A Terrain staffer from Uganda said
he saw between 80 and 100 men pour into the compound after breaking
open the gate with gunshots and tire irons. The Terrain's security
guards were armed only with shotguns and were vastly outnumbered. The
soldiers then went to door to door, taking money, phones, laptops and
car keys.
"They were very excited, very drunk, under the
influence of something, almost a mad state, walking around shooting off
rounds inside the rooms," one American said.
One man wore a blue police uniform, but the rest
wore camouflage, the American said. Many had shoulder patches with the
face of a tiger, the insignia worn by the president's personal guard.
For about an hour, soldiers beat the American
with belts and the butts of their guns and accused him of hiding rebels.
They fired bullets at his feet and close to his head. Eventually, one
soldier who appeared to be in charge told him to leave the compound.
Soldiers at the gate looked at his U.S. passport and handed it back,
with instructions.
"You tell your embassy how we treated you," they said. He made his way to the nearby U.N. compound and appealed for help.
Meanwhile, soldiers were breaking into a
two-story apartment block in the Terrain which had been deemed a safe
house because of a heavy metal door guarding the apartments upstairs.
Warned by a Kenyan staffer, more than 20 people inside, most of them
foreigners, tried to hide. About 10 squeezed into a single bathroom.
The building shook as soldiers shot at the metal
door and pried metal bars off windows for more than an hour, said
residents. Once inside, the soldiers started ransacking the rooms and
assaulting people they found.
Some of the soldiers were violent as they
sexually assaulted women, said the woman who said she was raped by 15
men. Others, who looked to be just 15 or 16 years old, looked scared and
were coerced into the act.
"One in particular, he was calling you,
'Sweetie, we should run away and get married.' It was like he was on a
first date," the woman said. "He didn't see that what he was doing was a
bad thing."
After about an hour and a half, the soldiers
broke into the bathroom. They shot through the door, said Jesse Bunch,
an American contractor who was hit in the leg.
"We kill you! We kill you!" the soldiers
shouted, according to a Western woman in the bathroom. "They would shoot
up at the ceiling and say, 'Do you want to die?' and we had to answer
'No!'"
The soldiers then pulled people out one by one.
One woman said she was sexually assaulted by multiple men. Another
Western woman said soldiers beat her with fists and threatened her with
their guns when she tried to resist. She said five men raped her.
During the attack on the Terrain, several
survivors told the AP that soldiers specifically asked if they were
American. "One of them, as soon as he said he was American, he was hit
with a rifle butt," said a woman.
When the soldiers came across John Gatluak, they
knew he was local. The South Sudanese journalist worked for Internews, a
media development organization funded by USAID. He had taken refuge at
the Terrain after being briefly detained a few days earlier. The tribal
scars on his forehead made it obvious he was Nuer, the same as
opposition leader, Riek Machar.
Upon seeing him, the soldiers pushed him to the floor and beat him, according to the same woman who saw the American beaten.
Later in the attack, and after Kiir's side
declared a ceasefire at 6 p.m., the soldiers forced the foreigners to
stand in a semi-circle, said Gian Libot, a Philippines citizen who spent
much of the attack under a bed until he was discovered.
One soldier ranted against foreigners. "He
definitely had pronounced hatred against America," Libot said, recalling
the soldier's words: "You messed up this country. You're helping the
rebels. The people in the U.N., they're helping the rebels."
During the tirade, a soldier hit a man suspected
of being American with a rifle butt. At one point, the soldier
threatened to kill all the foreigners assembled. "We're gonna show the
world an example," Libot remembered him saying.
Then Gatluak was hauled in front of the group.
One soldier shouted "Nuer," and another soldier shot him twice in the
head. He shot the dying Gatluak four more times while he lay on the
ground.
"All it took was a declaration that he was different, and they shot him mercilessly," Libot said.
The shooting seemed to be a turning point for
those assembled outside, Libot said. Looting and threats continued, but
beatings started to draw to a close. Other soldiers continued to assault
men and women inside the apartment block.
From the start of the attack, those inside the
Terrain compound sent messages pleading for help by text and Facebook
messages and emails.
"All of us were contacting whoever we could
contact. The U.N., the U.S. embassy, contacting the specific battalions
in the U.N., contacting specific departments," said the woman raped by
15 men.
A member of the U.N.'s Joint Operations Center
in Juba first received word of the attack at 3:37 p.m., minutes after
the breach of the compound, according to an internal timeline compiled
by a member of the operations center and seen by AP.
Eight minutes later another message was sent to a
different member of the operations center from a person inside Terrain
saying that people were hiding there. At 4:22 p.m., that member received
another message urging help.
Five minutes after that, the U.N. mission's
Department of Safety and Security and its military command wing were
alerted. At 4:33 p.m., a Quick Reaction Force, meant to intervene in
emergencies, was informed. One minute later, the timeline notes the last
contact on Monday from someone trapped inside Terrain.
For the next hour and a half the timeline is
blank. At 6:52, shortly before sunset, the timeline states that "DSS
would not send a team."
About 20 minutes later, a Quick Reaction Force
of Ethiopians from the multinational U.N. mission was tasked to
intervene, coordinating with South Sudan's army chief of staff, Paul
Malong, who was also sending soldiers. But the Ethiopian battalion stood
down, according to the timeline. Malong's troops eventually abandoned
their intervention too because it took too long for the Quick Reaction
Force to act.
The American who was released early in the
assault and made it to the U.N. base said he also alerted U.N. staff. At
around dusk, a U.N. worker he knew requested three different battalions
to send a Quick Reaction Force.
"Everyone refused to go. Ethiopia, China, and Nepal. All refused to go," he said.
Eventually, South Sudanese security forces
entered the Terrain and rescued all but three Western women and around
16 Terrain staff.
No one else was sent that night to find them.
The U.N. timeline said a patrol would go in the morning, but this "was
cancelled due to priority." A private security firm rescued the three
Western women the staffers the next morning.
When asked why the U.N. peacekeeping mission
didn't respond to the repeated requests for help, acting spokeswoman
Yasmina Bouziane said the circumstances are under investigation.
"The peacekeepers did not venture out of the
bases to protect civilians under imminent threat," Human Rights Watch
said Monday in a report on abuses throughout Juba.
The U.S. Embassy, which also received requests for help during the attack, did not respond to repeated requests for comment.
The assault at the Terrain pierced a feeling of
security among some foreigners who had assumed that they would be
protected by their governments or the hundreds of U.N. peacekeepers
almost next door.
One of the women gang-raped said security
advisers from an aid organization living in the compound told residents
repeatedly that they were safe because foreigners would not be targeted.
She said: "This sentence, 'We are not targeted,' I heard half an hour
before they assaulted us."