Wednesday, March 16, 2011
South Sudan: Conflict zone widens as militias conduct
bold attacks on Malakal
Source: Enough Project at the Center for American
Progress
Upper Nile police and SPLA forces clashed with militia
men led by Commander Olony in the state capital of Malakal over the weekend,
resulting in the deaths of 40 rebels, one SPLA officer, and two policemen,
with many wounded. In the past several weeks, the SPLA and other security
forces have taken large casualties as militias led by Lt. Gen. George Athor
and Commander Olony opened up several fronts in parts of northern Jonglei
and southern Upper Nile states.
Hundreds of civilian casualties have been reported in
several fights that began soon after the referendum, and GOSS officials are
struggling to come up with new ideas to deal with the menace of local
militias. Meanwhile, as the conflict theater expands and becomes increasing
inaccessible to the United Nations and humanitarian organizations, details
about culpability and the impact on civilians are difficult to ascertain.
There are large uncertainties about what prompted the
most recent onslaught. Interviews with civilians on the ground highlight
multiple understandings of what transpired. One version of the story goes
like this: On March 7, one SPLA soldier is rumored to have raped a woman in
Dur village near Owachi, just south of Malakal town. Olony's group, which
was located in the same village, retaliated with small arms fire when the
SPLA refused to give the perpetrator up. This incident then grew into a
larger firefight drawing in reinforcements on both sides. Another version
claims that an SPLA soldier who accidentally strayed into Commander Olony's
camp was also killed. When the SPLA killed one of the rebels as a
retributive measure, it led to the most recent crisis. A third scenario
suggests that fighting broke out when the SPLA prevented Olony's group from
passing a checkpoint in Owachi, and a fourth still, put forth by the
southern army, asserts that Olony's group attacked the town.
It is debatable whether this uncertainty has been
fomented as part of a strategy or whether it is merely a result of fluid,
insecure conditions. All four scenarios show how quickly tempers can flare
and a tense situation can deteriorate with deadly consequences.
Olony's motivations remain ambiguous. Olony, who is a
former SPLA officer and a Shilluk, broke away more than one year ago due to
grievances against the Dinka-dominated army and government when his land was
taken away from him. Despite an army-led peace effort to rein him in, he has
remained an outsider. (See the recent "South Sudan's Militias" report for
more on Olony and others.) Some in Upper Nile's government suggest that
Olony was spurred by the NCP to carry out the most recent Malakal attack.
Others say he was dissatisfied with the rank he was promised for
reintegrating into the SPLA.
There is also confusion about whether or not Athor and
Olony have joined forces. According to government officials, this is
unlikely given that their motivations to fight are different. However,
public perception is at odds with this logic, not least because they both
have been fighting a common enemy. "Olony might have joined Athor," said one
church leader in Malakal. "They do not have big enough forces to take on
Malakal alone."
Meanwhile, however, the geographical range of security
threats has considerably grown. Athor and Olony remain at large, and their
area of operations has expanded from traditional, more remote hotspots like
Khorflous, New Fangak, and the Atar regions to urban environments such as
the Upper Nile state capital of Malakal. Unlike traditional armies, their
men use guerilla methods, compensating for their smaller numbers even as
fighting extends into towns where they might not be entirely aware of the
road networks. Over the weekend, some of Olony's men who were trying to flee
SPLA soldiers took shelter in an orphanage and held over 100 children
hostage while they tried to negotiate their escape.
Despite their military superiority, the SPLA/SPLM
continue to remain unprepared, and there is a lack of consensus on
developing a strategy to tackle the militia problem in Upper Nile. Some
officials have reluctantly admitted that this has been a problem. "We do not
know where this attack came from, and who really was responsible for it,"
said the local police commissioner in Malakal. "Any attack from the outside
on the city, it is the army's job to protect, not the police," he told
Enough. "We did not expect this attack," said the governor. "A strategy [to
deal with this problem] is not there yet."

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