JUBA- At least 58 people were killed
and more than 100 others wounded in Thursday’s attack on a UN base in South
Sudan sheltering thousands of displaced civilians, a UN official said.
“The total death toll is 58, but
that could increase as over 100 people were wounded, some of them very
seriously.”
In the clearest account yet of the
incident in the government-controlled town of Bor, Lanzer said a group of
around 350 armed youths in civilian clothes “used extremely violent force to
breach the perimeter” of the UN base.
He said they opened fire on
terrified civilians, who have sought shelter with the UN from a wave of ethnic
violence that has marked the four-month-old conflict, with the apparent aim of
killing as many people as possible.
“When we realised we were under
attack we responded… the quick actions of the peacekeepers saved lives,” Lanzer
said.
He praised the actions of UN
peacekeepers from India, Nepal and South Korea charged with the protection of
the 5,000 people in the UN base.
“We will do everything necessary to
protect the lives of people in our protection, including the use of lethal
force,” Lanzer said.
He said measures had been taken to
boost security at other UN bases in the country, which are sheltering close to
60,000 people from different ethnic groups.
“This past week has been the most
bleak in South Sudan’s history,” Lanzer said, citing the attack on the UN base
as well as reports of renewed atrocities further north in the oil-hub of
Bentiu, which fell to rebel forces during the week.
Lanzer said South Sudan’s conflict,
which began on December 15 following a clash between army units loyal to
President Salva Kiir and troops backing ousted vice president Riek Machar, had
now fallen into “a cycle of revenge”.
“It’s vital that all communities
realise that they are taking this country nowhere fast,” he said.
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