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Susan Rices passive role in South Sudan conflict

sudan

Senior Member
Oct 17, 2012
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US national security adviser Susan Rice who considered the emergence of South Sudan is one of her great achievements has raised no finger to stop the bloody fighting broke out between South Sudan government and revel loyal to former vice president, Dr Riek Machar.

It is widely known that when Rice wants anything to be done according to her wishes she just phones South Sudanese leaders to do so and so, because she has been maintaining relationship since the days of the late Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) leader, Dr John Garang was killed in a suspicious 2005 helicopter crash in Uganda.

For instance when South Sudan President sacked secretary general of SPLM, she intervened to reinstate him. Pagan Amum felt important to US administration.

Rice has long been not only an embarrassment to the United States in Africa but has helped to create violent chaos that has claimed more than 6 million lives.

Rice is not only involved in Sudan, but she is also involved in the entire continent. She has fanned many disputes in Africa.

In addition to her role in Rwanda, Rice has sided with South Sudan against Sudan and despises the government of Sudan in Khartoum. She has fabricated the war crimes in Darfur and International Criminal Court warrant of arrest.

Rice now risks plunging the U.S. into an ethnic-based civil war. Her friend Kiir and his government are ethnic Dinkas. Machar and his rebels are ethnic Nuers.

This mistake can only be avoided if Rice has adopted sensible policy and opened good communication channels with the warring parties to shun the new born state destruction and division and help negotiate a comprehensive settlement that will not only secure South Sudan’s future.
 
Samantha Power speaks out against Sudan atrocities...
:eusa_clap:
Sudan government bombing hospitals and schools, US says
Friday 13 June 2014 ~ Ambassador to UN Samantha Power accuses Sudan of dropping hundreds of barrel bombs on own civilians
The US has accused Sudan of bombing hospitals and schools in an intensifying military campaign against its own people in a largely hidden war. Samantha Power, the US ambassador to the United Nations, condemned "in the strongest possible terms" bombardments of civilians that she claimed were being carried out by the Sudanese government and its rapid support forces. "Since April, not only have ground attacks on, and the shelling of, civilian populations increased, but the government of Sudan has intensified its air campaign, dropping hundreds of barrel bombs and other ordnance on Sudanese towns and villages, deliberately targeting hospitals and schools," Power said.

Women-and-children-at-a-r-011.jpg

Women and children sit outside tents at the Zam Zam refugee camp in north Darfur, Sudan, after fleeing militia attacks on their villages.

Forces loyal to president Omar al-Bashir, who is wanted by the international criminal court on charges of crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide, have been fighting ethnic-minority rebels for three years in a conflict said by the UN to have affected more than a million people. The government has denied aid access to the embattled states of South Kordofan and neighbouring Blue Nile. Power said the US was disturbed by reports of air strikes against civilian aid workers which, if proven, would seriously violate international law. Aid groups working in Sudan have accused the military of looting and destroying food and water supplies in areas recaptured by rebels, she added. "The uptick in violence in South Kordofan and Blue Nile has displaced or severely affected approximately 1.2 million people; it has increased the population's vulnerability to disease and malnutrition; and it has disrupted planting cycles, which will only compound food insecurity in the regions."

The ambassador compared the government's tactics with those used in the western region of Darfur, where she said more than 300,000 people had been displaced so far this year alone. "The United States calls on all armed groups in Sudan to cease all violence against civilians and comply with international law." Power's intervention came after a coalition of 46 organisations [http://www.sudanconsortium.org] providing humanitarian aid or supporting peace efforts in Sudan wrote to the UN security council, African Union and Arab League demanding an end to attacks on civilians. Recent bombings, especially in South Kordofan, had reached an unprecedented intensity, the letter said. "These unprecedented attacks represent the largest sustained bombardment of civilian targets in the three-year history of the conflict. They have spread terror and sent families into hiding in caves and foxholes, too afraid to plant their crops."

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