Divided UN extends arms embargo on South Sudan as fears of renewed civil war grow

Divided UN extends arms embargo on South Sudan as fears of renewed civil war grow
A divided U.N. Security Council voted Friday to extend an arms embargo on South Sudan, where escalating political tensions have led the U.N. to warn that the country could again plunge into civil war. (AP/File)
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Updated 31 May 2025

Divided UN extends arms embargo on South Sudan as fears of renewed civil war grow

Divided UN extends arms embargo on South Sudan as fears of renewed civil war grow
  • The arms embargo, and travel bans and asset freezes on South Sudanese on the UN sanctions blacklist, were extended for a year until May 31, 2026
  • There were high hopes for peace and stability after oil-rich South Sudan gained independence

UNITED NATIONS: A divided UN Security Council voted Friday to extend an arms embargo on South Sudan, where escalating political tensions have led the UN to warn that the country could again plunge into civil war.

A US-sponsored resolution to extend the embargo and other sanctions was approved by the narrowest margin — the minimum nine “yes” votes required. Six countries abstained – Russia, China, Algeria, Sierra Leone, Somalia and Pakistan.

The arms embargo, and travel bans and asset freezes on South Sudanese on the UN sanctions blacklist, were extended for a year until May 31, 2026.

There were high hopes for peace and stability after oil-rich South Sudan gained independence from Sudan in 2011, becoming the world’s newest nation.

But the country slid into civil war in December 2013 when forces loyal to President Salva Kiir, who is from the largest ethnic group in the country, the Dinka, started battling those loyal to Riek Machar, who is from the second-largest ethnic group, the Nuer.

A 2018 peace deal that brought Machar into the government as first vice president has been fragile, and implementation has been slow. A presidential election has been postponed until 2026.

Last month, the UN envoy to South Sudan, Nicholas Haysom, warned that the escalating rivalry between Kiir and Machar had degenerated into direct military confrontation between their parties and led to Machar’s arrest.

A campaign of misinformation, disinformation and hate speech is “fueling political and ethnic tensions — particularly on social media,” he warned. And “these conditions are darkly reminiscent of the 2013 and 2016 conflicts, which took over 400,000 lives.”

US Minister Counselor John Kelley thanked the council after the vote, saying the arms embargo “remains necessary to stem the unfettered flow of weapons into a region that remains awash with guns.”

“Escalating violence in recent months has brought South Sudan to the brink of civil war,” he said, urging the country’s leaders to restore peace.

Russia’s deputy UN ambassador Anna Evstigneeva countered by saying the easing of Security Council sanctions on South Sudan is long overdue. She said the arms embargo and other sanctions are restricting implementation of the 2018 peace agreement.

She accused the resolution’s supporters of “putting a brake on a successful political process unfolding in Sudan, as well as complicating the deployment and proper equipping of the national armed forces.”

South Sudan’s UN ambassador, Cecilia Adeng, expressed “deep disappointment” at the extension of the arms embargo and other sanctions.

“The lifting of the sanctions and the arms embargo is not only a matter of national security or sovereignty, but also a matter of economic opportunity and dignity,” she said. “These measures create barriers to growth, delay development, discourage foreign investment, and leave the state vulnerable to non-state actors and outlaws.”


‘Children are bound to die’: Corruption, aid cuts and violence fuel a hunger crisis in South Sudan

‘Children are bound to die’: Corruption, aid cuts and violence fuel a hunger crisis in South Sudan
Updated 58 min 25 sec ago

‘Children are bound to die’: Corruption, aid cuts and violence fuel a hunger crisis in South Sudan

‘Children are bound to die’: Corruption, aid cuts and violence fuel a hunger crisis in South Sudan
  • The report attributes the rising numbers to renewed conflict in the northern counties and reduced humanitarian assistance
  • Now, funding cuts, renewed violence, climate change, and entrenched corruption are converging to deepen the unfolding hunger crisis

JUBA: At 14 months, Adut Duor should be walking. Instead, his spine juts through his skin and his legs dangle like sticks from his mother’s lap in a South Sudan hospital. At half the size of a healthy baby his age, he is unable to walk.
Adut’s mother, Ayan, couldn’t breastfeed her fifth child, a struggle shared by the 1.1 million pregnant and lactating women who are malnourished in the east African country.
“If I had a blessed life and money to feed him, he would get better,” Ayan said at a state hospital in Bor, 200 kilometers (124 miles) from the capital, Juba.
A recent UN-backed report projects that about 2.3 million children under 5 in South Sudan now require treatment for acute malnutrition, with over 700,000 of those in severe condition. The report attributes the rising numbers to renewed conflict in the northern counties and reduced humanitarian assistance.
Independent since 2011, South Sudan has been crippled by violence and poor governance. United Nations investigators recently accused authorities of looting billions of dollars in public funds, as 9 million of South Sudan’s almost 12 million people rely on humanitarian assistance. Now, funding cuts, renewed violence, climate change and entrenched corruption are converging to deepen the unfolding hunger crisis.
Funding cuts
In the basic ward at the hospital in Bor, dozens of mothers cradle frail children. Malnutrition cases have more than doubled this year, a crisis worsened by recent staff cuts. Funding cuts this spring forced Save the Children to lay off 180 aid staff, including 15 nutrition workers who were withdrawn from Bor in May.
Funding cuts have also hit supplies of ready-to-use therapeutic food, RUTF, the peanut paste that has been a lifeline for millions of children around the world. USAID once covered half global production, but Action Against Hunger’s Country Director Clement Papy Nkubizi warns stocks are now running dangerously low.
“Twenty-two percent of children admitted for malnutrition at Juba’s largest children’s hospital have died of hunger,” Nkubizi said. “Triangulating this to the field… there are many children who are bound to die.”
He explains that families now walk for hours to reach support after the organization closed 28 malnutrition centers. UNICEF says more than 800 (66 percent) of malnutrition sites nationwide report reduced staffing.
Violence hampering aid delivery
Violence in South Sudan’s northern states has compounded the crisis, blocking humanitarian access and driving hundreds of thousands from their farmland.
Although a 2018 peace deal ended the country’s five-year civil war, renewed clashes between the national army and militia groups raise fears of a return to large-scale conflict. In Upper Nile State, where the violence has resurged, malnutrition levels are the highest.
The UN said intensified fighting along the white Nile River meant no supplies reached the area for over a month in May, plunging more than 60,000 already malnourished children into deeper hunger.
In June, the South Sudanese government told The Associated Press it turned to US company Fogbow for airdrops to respond to needs in areas hit by violence. Although the company claims to be a humanitarian force, UN workers question the departure from the established system.
Global humanitarian group Action Against Hunger had to abandon warehouses and operations in Fangak, Jonglei State, after an aerial bombing of a Doctors Without Borders hospital left seven dead in May.
“Our sites in these locations are now also flooded, submerged as we speak,” said Nkubizi.
Around 1.6 million people are at risk of displacement from flooding, as submerged farmland and failed harvests compound hunger in the climate-vulnerable country.
“Malnutrition is not just about food insecurity — cholera outbreaks, malaria and poor sanitation compound the problem,” says Shaun Hughes, the World Food Program’s regional emergency coordinator.
With more than 60 percent of the population defecating in the open, flooding turns contaminated water into a major health threat.
No nutritional support
At Maban County Hospital near the northern border with Sudan, 8-month-old Moussa Adil cries with hunger in his mother’s arms.
Moussa’s nutritionist, Butros Khalil, says there’s no supplementary milk for the frail child that evening. The hospital received its last major consignment in March.
US funding cuts forced international aid groups to reduce support to this hospital. Khalil and dozens of colleagues have not been paid for six months. “Now we are just eating leaves from the bush,” he says, describing how the exorbitant cost of living makes it impossible to feed his 20-person family.
The neighboring war in Sudan has disrupted trade and driven up the cost of basic goods. Combined with soaring inflation, the economic pressure means 92 percent of South Sudanese live below the poverty line — a 12 percent increase from last year, according to the African Development Bank.
“People pull their kids out of school, they sell their cattle just to make ends meet, then they become the hungry people,” says Hughes.
Action Against Hunger says it had to halt school feeding after US funding was withdrawn, raising fears of children slipping from moderate to dangerous hunger levels.
In Maban’s camps near the Sudan border, refugees say WFP cash and dry food handouts no longer cover basic needs. With rations halved and over half the area’s population removed from the eligibility list, many face hunger — some even consider returning to war-torn Sudan.
Critics say years of aid dependence have exposed South Sudan. The government allocates just 1.3 percent of its budget to health — far below the 15 percent target set by the World Health Organization, according to a recent UNICEF report. Meanwhile, 80 percent of the health care system is funded by foreign donors.
Corruption
The UN Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan recently said billions of dollars had been lost to corruption, as public officials diverted revenue. The government called the allegations “absurd.”
Committee member Barney Afako said leaders were “breaching international laws which oblige governments to apply maximum available resources to realize the rights to food, health and education.”
The Commission Chairperson, Yasmin Sooka, said the funds siphoned off by elites could have built schools, staffed hospitals and secured food for the South Sudanese people.
“Corruption is killing South Sudanese. It’s not incidental — it’s the engine of South Sudan’s collapse, hollowing out its economy, gutting institutions, fueling conflict, and condemning its people to hunger and preventable death,” she said.
As the international community warns of a worsening crisis, it has already reached the hospital floors of South Sudan and the frail frames of children like Moussa and Adut.


Syria’s new envoy vows to ‘turn hope into action’ in first UN Security Council address

Syria’s new envoy vows to ‘turn hope into action’ in first UN Security Council address
Updated 36 min 2 sec ago

Syria’s new envoy vows to ‘turn hope into action’ in first UN Security Council address

Syria’s new envoy vows to ‘turn hope into action’ in first UN Security Council address
  • Damascus commits to elections, international cooperation
  • Syria requires major economic support, says Ibrahim Olabi

NEW YORK: The Syrian Arab Republic’s new Permanent Representative to the UN Ibrahim Olabi pledged to “turn hope into action” in a landmark address to the Security Council on Thursday, signaling what he described as a historic shift in the country’s approach to diplomacy, accountability, and national reconciliation.

Delivering his first remarks since assuming the post on Sept. 11, the 34-year-old British-German lawyer and human rights advocate, acknowledged international calls for justice and reform.

He vowed that Syria would “add to hope, action,” and work to restore unity and stability in a country ravaged by over a decade of war amidst the fall of the previous regime.

“Less than a year ago, a young Syrian woman sat at this very table speaking out against tyranny. Today, I stand before you as a representative of a new Syria — a Syria committed to freedom, dignity, and justice,” Olabi said.

Much of Olabi’s statement focused on recent unrest in Suwayda, a southern governorate that has seen mass protests and violent crackdowns in recent months.

He told council members that the Syrian government had adopted a comprehensive roadmap for resolving the crisis, developed during a tripartite meeting in Damascus with the US and Jordan.

The plan includes an official request for an investigation by the UN’s Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Syria and a commitment to hold accountable all perpetrators of violence, regardless of affiliation.

Olabi noted that suspects from the Ministry of Defense and Interior had already been arrested and that the government had taken “unprecedented steps” to cooperate with international investigators.

“The families of the victims should feel that justice was truly served,” he said, promising that the process would be inclusive and transparent.

The roadmap, according to Olabi, also envisions the creation of a local police force representative of Suwayda’s diverse population, reconstruction of destroyed areas, delivery of humanitarian assistance, and a campaign to promote national unity and counter extremism.

Olabi outlined what he called a “new political reality” in Syria, following the “liberation of the country from oppression” and the preservation of state institutions. He announced that Syria would soon hold the first elections “in decades” based on a genuine separation of powers.

“These elections will be a genuine opportunity for all Syrian men and women to participate in drafting the future of the country,” he said, promising a minimum of 20 percent representation for women on candidate lists and allowing international observers to monitor the vote.

Olabi said the electoral process would be carried out under judicial and media supervision, with oversight agreements already signed between the High Electoral Commission and civil society organizations.

In addition to political reforms, Olabi emphasized Syria’s efforts to revive its economy through agreements with foreign governments and international companies. He pointed to global partnerships and community-led initiatives from the Syrian diaspora aimed at supporting the country’s recovery.

However, he lamented what he called the international community’s “insufficient” support at both the humanitarian and developmental levels.

He urged member states to fulfill their pledges to the UN’s humanitarian response plan and warned that Syria is facing its worst drought in three decades, threatening food and water security.

“We need a quantum leap in international engagement to meet the scale of our challenges,” he said.

Olabi also condemned recent Israeli airstrikes in Syria and called on the UN Security Council to take urgent action. He accused Israel of expanding its operations in Syrian territory, particularly in the occupied Golan Heights, and cited relevant UN resolutions demanding Israeli withdrawal.

Olabi concluded his remarks with a sweeping vision for Syria’s future, one centered on inclusivity, sovereignty, and civil peace.

“Damascus, the heart of Syria, will continue to bring together all Syrian men and women,” he said. “They stand today united, looking towards the future, rejecting terrorism, hate speech, and extremism — turning the page on suffering and pain.”


WHO chief says Gaza hospitals on ‘brink of collapse’

WHO chief says Gaza hospitals on ‘brink of collapse’
Updated 19 September 2025

WHO chief says Gaza hospitals on ‘brink of collapse’

WHO chief says Gaza hospitals on ‘brink of collapse’
  • edros Adhanom Ghebreyesus: Military incursion and evacuation orders are driving new waves of displacement

GENEVA: The World Health Organization chief warned on Thursday that Israel’s ground offensive in northern Gaza had left already overwhelmed hospitals on the “brink of collapse” and demanded an “end to these inhumane conditions.”

“The military incursion and evacuation orders in northern Gaza are driving new waves of displacement, forcing traumatized families into an ever-shrinking area unfit for human dignity,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on X, warning that “hospitals, already overwhelmed, are on the brink of collapse as escalating violence blocks access and prevents WHO from delivering lifesaving supplies.”

Gaza City’s Al-Shifa Hospital said it had received the bodies of 20 people killed in Israeli strikes since midnight.

More than 60 people had been killed by Israeli fire on Wednesday, according to Gaza’s civil defense agency.

Also on Thursday, Spain said it will probe “human rights violations in Gaza” to assist the International Criminal Court, which has sought arrest warrants for top Israeli officials over alleged war crimes.

The announcement marks another step by Spain, a virulent critic of the devastating Israeli offensive in the Palestinian territory, to lead international action over the conflict.

Spain’s top prosecutor, Alvaro Garcia Ortiz, has “issued a decree to create a working team tasked with investigating violations of international human rights law in Gaza,” his office said in a statement.

The investigative team’s mission will be to “gather evidence and make it available to the competent body, thereby fulfilling Spain’s obligations regarding international cooperation and human rights,” it said.

“Faced with the current situation in the Palestinian territories, all evidence, direct or indirect, that can be gathered in our country” on “crimes committed” in Gaza “must be included” for potential use in the ICC case, it added in the decree.

The statement mentioned a Spanish police report which reřcorded “acts that could constitute crimes against the international community” perpetrated by the Israeli army in Gaza.

The ICC has issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in Israel’s campaign in Gaza.

Spain has also joined a case before another world court, 4the International Court of Justice, accusing Israel of genocide in Gaza.

 

 

 


Syrian authorities capture 2020 car bomber near Aleppo

Syrian authorities capture 2020 car bomber near Aleppo
Updated 18 September 2025

Syrian authorities capture 2020 car bomber near Aleppo

Syrian authorities capture 2020 car bomber near Aleppo
  • At least five people killed and 85 injured in the explosion in Saajo town in July 2020
  • Hussein Hajj Mowas was trying to escape, disguised in female attire, when authorities arrested him on Thursday

LONDON: Syrian authorities have arrested a suspect linked to a 2020 car bomb attack in the town of Saajo, near Azaz in northern Syria, which killed five and injured dozens of people.

The Internal Security Command in Aleppo announced the capture of Hussein Hajj Mowas, from the village of Marran in Aleppo countryside. Officials said he was disguised in female attire in an attempt to escape when he was detained on Thursday.

According to the Ministry of Interior, Mowas carried out the bombing in exchange for money and used his job as a delivery truck driver to smuggle weapons and banned materials.

The July 2020 explosion in Saajo killed at least five people and wounded 85 others.

Since the fall of the Bashar Assad regime last December, the new government in Damascus has arrested several suspects and criminals, including army officers, over crimes committed during the country’s civil conflict.


Turkish and Palestinian presidents discuss international recognition of Palestinian statehood at UN

Turkish and Palestinian presidents discuss international recognition of Palestinian statehood at UN
Updated 18 September 2025

Turkish and Palestinian presidents discuss international recognition of Palestinian statehood at UN

Turkish and Palestinian presidents discuss international recognition of Palestinian statehood at UN
  • Regional security and stability depend on ending the war in Gaza, and halting forced displacements and land grabs, says Mahmoud Abbas
  • Under joint sponsorship of and France, several major countries have stated intention to recognize Palestinian statehood during UN General Assembly next week

LONDON: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Thursday discussed with his Palestinian counterpart, Mahmoud Abbas, preparations for the UN General Assembly in New York next week, during which several countries have pledged to officially recognize the State of Palestine.

Their meeting, at the presidential palace in Ankara, focused on efforts to end Israel’s ongoing war on Gaza that began almost two years ago, the latest developments in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, and the pursuit of a two-state solution to resolve the wider conflict between Israelis and Palestinians.

Under the joint sponsorship of and France, several major countries and international powers have stated their intention to officially recognize Palestinian statehood during the UN General Assembly, including France, the UK, Canada, Australia and Belgium.

Abbas said that regional security and stability depend on ending the war in Gaza, halting the forced displacement of Palestinians and land grabs by Israel, and ending the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories through the establishment of a Palestinian state based on pre-1967 borders with East Jerusalem as its capital, the Palestinian Wafa news agency reported.

Abbas and Erdogan also discussed Palestine’s strong historical ties with Turkiye, which ruled the Mediterranean region for nearly four centuries through its Ottoman Empire until the British and French mandates for the region during the First World War.

Abbas arrived in Turkiye on Wednesday for a three-day official visit.