South Sudan Accuses Kenya of Border Encroachment

South Sudan has accused Kenya of trying to steal disputed territory along their border after communal clashes left at least eight people dead.

Parliamentarians are piling pressure on South Sudanese President Salva Kiir to recall the house from recess so they can discuss the simmering border dispute. Fighting occurred last weekend in the area, in and around the town of Nakodok, a few miles from an oil field on the Kenyan side of the border.

South Sudan says Kenyan troops tried to take control of Nakodok, an area of Kapoeta East County. Abdullah Angelo Lokeno, the county commissioner, said eight people were reported to have been killed from the Kenyan side. He said the situation was now calm, and that he had urged the government of South Sudan “to return the people of Kenya to their place so that citizens can get to rest. The government should come and control the situation.”

In 2009, Kenya and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement — the ruling party of what was then southern Sudan — signed an agreement to establish a temporary border control post at Nadapal to facilitate cross-border movement of people, goods and services.

The meeting was held in Nairobi with representatives from both sides, according to documents seen by VOA.

Juol Nhomngek, a South Sudanese lawmaker, said the agreement no longer holds, as it is not anchored in any legislation passed since South Sudan won independence from Sudan in 2011.

“Even if there were an agreement, it could not be given without the consent of the parliament that represents the people,” Nhomngek said.

On Thursday, Kiir dispatched his special adviser to Nairobi, a move seen as an effort to ease the tension between the two countries. The mission came a day after Kenya sent Cabinet Secretary Moses Kuria to Juba to deliver a message from President William Ruto.

South Sudan Foreign Affairs Minister Mayiik Ayii Deng said the government hopes to use diplomatic means to resolve the impasse.

Kiir is under immense pressure to reconvene the national assembly to discuss the matter. Bol Joseph Agau, a member of parliament and a member of the National Democratic Movement Party under the South Sudan Opposition Alliance (SSOA), said, “We need the parliament to be recalled by the head of the state. His excellency, the President Salva Kiir, needs to see that we have a big need for the parliament to be reopened.”

Some leaders said South Sudan would not cede even an inch of territory.

Dau Deng Dau, deputy minister for foreign affairs, said South Sudan “is called a country because of a defined territory and population, and we want to inform our youths to be calm, be patient, your country is addressing all these matters.”

The deputy foreign affairs minister said South Sudan had several other areas that, in his words, had been entered by neighboring countries, specifically Kenya and Uganda. He said South Sudan’s border commission was working with both countries to resolve the issues.

Source: Voice of America

South Sudan: Forcefully returned critic held incommunicado: Morris Mabior Awikjok Bak

On 4 February, Morris Mabior Awikjok Bak, a South Sudanese critic, was reportedly arbitrarily arrested, allegedly by armed Kenyan security forces and a South Sudanese man in civilian dress in Nairobi, Kenya where he resides. It is believed he was forcefully returned to Juba, South Sudan and is being held in incommunicado detention at a National Security Service detention facility. The South Sudanese authorities must clarify and reveal Morris Mabior Awikjok Bak’s fate and whereabouts, ensure he has regular access to his family, a lawyer and a doctor, and unless he is charged with an internationally recognisable offence, immediately release him.

Source: Amnesty International

Kenya, Eritrea resolve to abolish visa requirements

NAIROBI–Kenya and Eritrea have resolved to permanently abolish visa requirements for their respective citizens.

President William Ruto and his Eritrean counterpart Isaias Afwerki said the move will facilitate growth in trade and connectivity between the citizens and business in the two countries.

“To facilitate growth in trade and connectivity between our people and business, we have agreed to abolish the requirement of visas permanently, effective today,” said Ruto.

In a meeting held at the State House, Nairobi, on Thursday, the two Heads of States said they have instructed their respective ministries of interior to work on the modalities for the ratification of the directive.

They said the move will bolster bilateral relations, improve people-to-people ties besides entrenching regional integration for prosperity.

As part of the efforts to further enhance bilateral relations and regional integration, President Ruto thanked President Afwerki for his commitment to review his country’s participation in IGAD.

Ruto said the move will strengthen IGAD and make it effectively respond to the needs of the region.

” I thank President Afwerki most sincerely for his commitment to review his participation in our regional organization IGAD,” said Ruto.

He added:” I look forward to working closely with him and the rest of the member states to re-engineer IGAD, make it fit for purpose and enable it to respond effectively to the needs of our region.”

At the same time, Ruto, announced that Kenya will open a diplomatic mission representation in Asmara, Eritrea.

He said his administration was committed to deepen and strengthen bilateral relations between the two countries.

“I wish to confirm, today, that Kenya will open a diplomatic mission representation in Asmara. I have consequently instructed the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to commence the process of operationalizing this immediately,” said Ruto.

The two Presidents said they have signed a framework agreement for cooperation which will form the basis for elaborating joint action across the various sectors.

Afwerki praised Ruto for his concerted efforts in ensuring peace is prevailed in Somalia and South Sudan among other areas in the region.

“You are inspiring millions of our people in IGAD for your concerted efforts in search for peace besides ensuring free movement of goods and people in order to encourage growth of trading activities in our region,” said Afwerki.

He said it’s through teamwork among IGAD member countries can prosper on peace efforts and the attainment of development.

“We will like to proof that this time round things will be done differently in our region,” said Afwerki.

Earlier, the two leaders held a bilateral talks where they agreed to develop comprehensive plans of cooperation in various sectors.

The areas of focus included; agriculture, trade and investment; air transport; mining, education, renewable energy, water management, tourism, the blue economy and regional integration.

Ruto thanked Afwerki for his gracious support of Kenya, including during ‘our campaign for the United Nations Security Council seat’.

” I have no doubt, that stronger cooperation will go a long way in driving the African agenda at the global level,” said Ruto.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Sudan’s Tropical Disease Spike Reflects Poor Health System

The two Sudanese women thought they had malaria and were taking their medication, but things took a dire turn. Both complained of a splitting headache and fever that didn’t respond to the antimalaria treatment.

By the time she was diagnosed with dengue fever, Raqiya Abdsalam was unconscious.

“Soon after they examined me, I fell into a coma,” she said, recounting her ordeal some three months ago. Both women have since recovered and are at home in the city of El Obeid in the central province of North Kordofan.

For decades, Sudan’s underfunded public health sector has struggled to effectively diagnose or treat patients as significant government spending went to its vast security services. A recent spike in mosquito-borne diseases — such as dengue fever and malaria — has underscored the fragility of the African country’s health system, boding ill for future challenges driven by climate change.

Sudan’s best-equipped hospitals are concentrated in the capital, Khartoum, leaving those from far-flung provinces reliant on aid projects. But many of those have disappeared.

In October 2021, Sudan’s leading military figure, Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan, led a coup that derailed the country’s short-lived democratic transition. The move spurred a sharp reduction in aid, with the U.N Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reporting that funding levels fell to less than 50% of required needs for both 2021 and 2022.

Burhan with his ruling generals and several other political forces pledged in December to install a new civilian government. But political wrangling is impeding a final deal, and it remains unclear when — and if — donor funding will return to previous levels.

In late fall, a young doctor at a North Kordofan hospital thought that what she was seeing was a new malaria outbreak. Patients arriving at her hospital had malaria-like symptoms — high fever, body fatigue and a migraine-like headache.

But after blood samples were sent to a laboratory in Khartoum for testing, a worrisome picture emerged. Some of the patients did have malaria, which is caused by a parasite, but others had dengue fever — similar in symptoms but caused by a virus. If severe and untreated, dengue fever can lead to organ failure and death.

The young physician said the hospital lacked the facilities to deal with the outbreak. “Patients had to either lie on the floor or bring their own beds to the hospital,’’ she said.

While malaria is common across central and southern Sudan, large dengue outbreaks are rare. But last fall and winter, dengue fever spread to 12 of the country’s 18 provinces, killing at least 36 people and infecting more than 5,200, according to Sudan’s Ministry of Health. However, the actual numbers are likely higher, given the limitations on testing.

‘‘Most hospitals outside of Khartoum are not connected to the Ministry of Health database,’’ said Alaaeldin Awad Mohamed Nogoud, a liver and transplant surgeon who is also a prominent pro-democracy activist.

The World Health Organization says several factors enabled the dengue outbreak, including the absence of disease surveillance infrastructure and heavy flooding in autumn. The stagnant water allowed mosquitoes to breed and fueled the spread of the disease.

Health experts also fear that growing mosquito migration, induced by climate change, could spur new surges in dengue fever, among other tropical diseases typically found beyond Sudan’s southern borders. The Aedes aegypti, a long-legged mosquito growing in number across Sudan that can carry the dengue virus, is causing particular concern.

According to Anne Wilson, an epidemiologist at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, containing illnesses spread by the Aedes aegypti is difficult because it mostly bites during the day, rendering insecticide-treated nets, similar to mosquito nets for beds, less effective.

Sudan’s public hospitals are state-run, but patients often still pay for drugs and tests. Hospitals in rural areas are the most depleted, stocked with little more than metal-frame beds and doctors.

In North Kordofan — the site of the recent dengue outbreak — some believe the virus went unchecked for months due to a widespread lack of blood testing equipment. Abdsalam and Amany Adris, the two women from El Obeid, said several doctors had told them they had malaria before they were correctly diagnosed.

After the Ministry of Health officially recognized the outbreak in November, officials say free testing and treatment were made available to dengue fever patients. And by January, North Kordofan was declared free of dengue fever.

But even after that announcement, the young doctor from the province said she was treating suspected cases. Few patients can afford to pay for the blood tests themselves, however, she added.

Both Nogoud and the young physician said widespread shortages are forcing physicians to go to black market for basic medicines, such as paracetamol IV drips to treat fever.

For years, Sudan has been in an economic crisis with annual inflation topping 100% on most months. Since 2018, the Sudanese pound has lost over 95% of its value against the dollar, making it difficult to buy pharmaceuticals or medical equipment from abroad.

By the end of last year, Sudan’s National Medical Supplies Fund — the body tasked with procuring pharmaceuticals — said the availability of cancer drugs stood at 48% of needed levels, and other emergency medication was at 68%. Doctors, working with little pay and in difficult conditions, have regularly gone on strike.

Critics accuse the country’s leaders of not putting more funds towards the health sector. The federal budget for 2021, listed on the government’s website, said the country’s health ministry would receive less than half of what would be allocated to the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces, the country’s largest paramilitary group. The military spokesperson did not respond to AP’s request for comment.

With few resources, the Health Ministry has turned to short videos on social media, encouraging people in a catchy song to cover standing water sources and install netting on windows.

Few see this as a long-term solution.

“The whole country is in a state of chaos,” said Nada Fadul, an infectious diseases physician and associate of the Sudanese non-governmental organization NexGen.

“Health care might not become the priority for survival,” Fadul added.

Source: Voice of America

Mix of optimism and doubt as Egypt-brokered Sudan conference concludes

The inter-Sudanese dialogue in Cairo concluded their conference on Tuesday, after agreeing to a full civilian government, as well as proposing a cabinet made up of non-partisan technocrats aligned with the revolution.

In a press statement issued on Tuesday by the conference participants, they renewed their adherence to the 2020 Constitutional Document, and proposed some contemporaneous amendments “in line with the current process”.

Alongside these decisions outlining the next steps for Sudan, the *85 participants in the Egypt-brokered conference also affirmed their commitment to implementing the Juba Peace Agreement (JPA), adding that they would address “the situation in eastern Sudan with an acceptable negotiating platform that involves relevant stakeholders”.

At the conclusion of the six-day Cairo dialogue conference initiated by the Egyptian government, the participants signed the Political Accordance Document, which is to be the governing document for the upcoming transitional period.

According to the final press statement, the Sudanese representatives agreed to form the National Democratic Forces Coordination “as an umbrella for all participants to carry out the task of communicating with all parties supporting the democratic transition”.

El Amin Daoud, a leading member of the Forces for Freedom and Change-Democratic Block (FFC-DB) alliance, told Radio Dabanga that the participants in the workshop agreed on mechanisms for selecting members of the executive and sovereignty councils.

The workshop called on the junta forces to distance themselves from all political and societal forces and not to interfere in political affairs.

The participants called for holding those responsible for crimes in Darfur, Blue Nile and South Kordofan “politically and legally accountable in accordance with the prevailing laws, and through traditional justice and transitional justice”, but did not refer to the extradition of wanted persons to the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague.

The conference called on “all forces supporting democratic transition to meet and discuss the national issues in order to reach a consensus”.

Doubts in Darfur

Lawyer Adam Sharif criticised the text on justice for the victims of the civil wars in Darfur, Blue Nile and South Kordofan. He told Radio Dabanga that “violations of private and public rights cannot be pardoned by prevailing laws when these crimes include crimes against humanity and genocide”. He further stressed the necessity of handing over the wanted persons to the ICC.

Yagoub Furi, head of the Darfur Displaced and Refugee Camps Coordination, commented by saying that the amnesty mentioned by the participants of the Cairo Conference can only come after justice.

Furi stated that “any talk about amnesty is an attempt to release Al Bashir and his cronies”, adding that “amnesty is a special right for the families of the victims.”

The recent conference on the Juba Peace Agreement (JPA) in Khartoum, organised by the AU-IGAD-UNITAMS Trilateral Mechanism, witnessed the absence of prominent displaced community leaders, due to them not being invited.

Furi criticised “the disregard of the Darfur displaced” by the organisers of the Cairo dialogue, stating that “we have nothing to do with the outputs of the Cairo conference, as they do not concern the victims and the displaced”.

He called for the formation of “a real civilian government in order to implement transitional justice issues”.

Saleh Eisa, head of the Darfur Displaced and Refugee Camps Administration, also played down the importance of the conference, stating that “the displaced adhere to justice and the extradition of wanted persons to the ICC and other criminal courts before talking about reconciliation and amnesty”.

Source: Radio Dabanga

14-year-old girl gang raped in West Darfur, lawlessness across region

A 14-year-old girl was gang-raped by a group of armed men in Kereinik in West Darfur on Tuesday. Sources report that the victim was confronted by four gunmen while she was returning from drawing water from a well close to her home in Dangei village in the area of Um Tajok on Tuesday afternoon.

The local source told Radio Dabanga that they took the girl with them at gunpoint to a nearby corral for livestock and proceeded “to take turns raping her until the morning”.

A search posse from Dangei village followed the tracks, raided the site, and were able to detain three of the alleged rapists. They took the victim to the clinic in Um Tajok, and the suspects to a nearby police station.

The source stated that “these days security breaches are increasing in an alarming manner, and all this does not stir the conscience of any of the officials who should protect the people”.

Central Darfur

In Central Darfur, Adam El Sayer (24) was shot dead, and another person was injured when a group of armed robbers fired at a passenger vehicle, four kilometres west of Nierteti on Tuesday afternoon.

A relative of the victim told Radio Dabanga that a complaint was filed at the Unified Police Department in Nierteti.

Policemen and members of a search posse managed to apprehend of the attackers.

Also in Central Darfur, a vehicle driver was injured in an armed robbery on the Zalingei-Abta road on Sunday.

North Darfur

In the area of Katur in Tawila in North Darfur, a cattle owner was killed on Tuesday.

Omda Adam Bosh told Radio Dabanga that gunmen shot the man dead and stole his cattle. He said that a military force moved from Tawila to the scene of the accident to pursue the perpetrators.

In a separate incident on Sunday, gunmen stole a herd of cows from the area south of Tawila. A resident of Tawila told Radio Dabanga that the area witnessed calm in the past days after the deployment of joint security forces, “but it seems that the situation has deteriorated again”.

The deployed Joint Force for the Protection of Civilians, who were welcomed after their arrival on Tuesday, have been tasked to protect the areas south of El Fasher, including Tabit, Abu Zareiga, Tawila, Wad Abakar, and Dar El Salam.

Many expressed that the joint forces, consisting of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces and former rebel combatants in the areas, should take up a permanent posting in the region, as their presence is a necessity in ensuring the provision of security and the protection of civilians from violations and security breaches that occur frequently.

South Darfur

People living in Nyala, capital of South Darfur, also complained about an increase in security chaos and robberies inside the city.

Teacher El Hadi Mohamed told Radio Dabanga that he was subjected to an armed robbery at gunpoint while he was returning home on Sunday.

Trader Osman Bashir also reported that three gunmen riding stormed his shop and robbed him of his money at gunpoint.

In a meeting on Tuesday in Nyala, Commanders of the Darfur Security Forces for the Protection of Civilians discussed the deployment of the joint forces in South Darfur as part of the implementation of the Security Arrangements protocol of the Juba Peace Agreement.

Source: Radio Dabanga