JUBA, South Sudan
South Sudan’s main opposition party said its leader Riek Machar has been arrested as the U.N. called on all parties to uphold the 2018 agreement that ended the country's civil war.
The U.N. had warned on Monday
that the country was teetering on the edge of a renewed civil war after
fighting in thee north between an armed group allied to Machar and government
forces.
Machar was “in confinement by
the government” and his life was “at risk,” opposition spokesperson Pal Mai
Deng said in a video address to the media Wednesday night.
The head of the U.N mission in
South Sudan, Nicholas Haysom, said following reports of the detention of
Machar, all parties should “exercise restraint and uphold the Revitalized Peace
Agreement.”
South Sudan's five-year civil
war, in which 400,000 people were killed, ended in a 2018 peace agreement that
brought President Salva Kiir and Machar together in a unity government. Machar
is one of the five vice presidents in the country.
Tensions have been increasing
between Kiir and Machar’s parties and escalated in March when the White Army,
an armed group loyal to Machar, overran an army base in Upper Nile state and
attacked a U.N. helicopter.
The government responded with
airstrikes, warning any civilian in the area where the army group is based to
vacate or “face consequences.”
More than a dozen people have
died since the airstrikes started in mid-March and the UN warned of a renewed
civil war if the leaders do not put the country’s interests first.
“Tonight, the country’s
leaders stand on the brink of relapsing into widespread conflict or taking the
country forward towards peace, recovery and democracy in the spirit of the
consensus that was reached in 2018 when they signed and committed to implementing
a Revitalized Peace Agreement,” Haysom said in a statement on Wednesday night.
An opposition official
described 20 heavily armed vehicles arriving at Machar's home where he was
arrested alongside his wife.
“His bodyguards were disarmed,
and an arrest warrant was delivered to him under unclear charges,” said Reath
Muoch Tang, an official in the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army - In
Opposition.
The U.S. State Department's
bureau of African affairs in a statement on X urged Kiir to reverse the house
arrest and “prevent further escalation of the situation.”
In early March, several of
Machar’s senior allies were arrested by security forces, an action his
supporters condemned as a “grave violation” of the peace deal.
Germany and Norway have
temporarily closed their respective embassies in Juba. The U.S Embassy further
reduced its minimal staff due to security threats and advised Americans who are
in the country to prepare to shelter should the “situation deteriorate further.”
The British Embassy also said it had temporarily reduced its staff with
consular services “severely limited.”
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