JUBA, South Sudan
South Sudanese soldiers surrounded First Vice President Riek Machar's home in the capital on Wednesday and several of his allies were arrested after an armed group allied to him overran an army base in the country's north.
Machar (pictured above), whose political
rivalry with President Salva Kiir has in the past exploded into civil war, said
last month that the firing of several of his allies from posts in the
government threatened the 2018 peace deal between him and Kiir that ended a
five-year civil war in which more than 400,000 people were killed.
Deputy army chief Gen. Gabriel
Duop Lam, also loyal to Machar, was detained Tuesday over the fighting in the
north, while Machar ally and Petroleum Minister Puot Kang Chol was arrested
Wednesday alongside his bodyguards and family. No reason was given for the
arrests.
Neither Machar nor his SPLM-IO
party has commented about the fighting, but Water Minister Pal Mai Deng, who is
also the party's spokesperson, said Lam's detention “puts the entire peace
agreement at risk.”
Western envoys last week urged
leaders to de-escalate the tension.
Ter Manyang Gatwich, executive
director of the Center for Peace and Advocacy, has called for the immediate
release of those detained to avert further escalation of violence and further
bloodshed from degenerating into what he called a "full-scale war."
South Sudan is yet to fully
implement the 2018 peace agreement and elections that were scheduled for last
year but were postponed by two years due to a lack of funds.
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