JUBA, South Sudan
South Sudan said on Monday it had carried out air strikes against rebels in the northwest of the country as hostilities escalated.
Clashes in Nasir County, Upper
Nile State, between forces loyal to President Salva Kiir and First Vice
President Riek Machar have threatened to undermine their fragile peace-sharing
agreement.
"Our air force bombarded
Nasir," information minister Michael Makuei Lueth told a press conference.
James Gatluak, the
commissioner of Nasir County, estimated that 20 people were killed in the
Sunday night attack. He claimed the airstrike was "directed to
civilians".
Among the dead were
"three children under five, two women, 14 teenage boys, and a
sub-chief".
"One is currently in
critical condition," Gatluak told our reporter, calling on the South
Sudanese government to embrace dialogue "instead of waging war against
civilians".
Lueth said the strikes were
part of "security operations", adding: "If you as a civilian
happen to be there... then there is nothing we can do."
The fighting threatens a 2018
peace deal between Kiir and Machar, who fought a five-year civil war that
killed some 400,000 people.
Kiir's allies have accused
Machar's forces of fomenting unrest in Nasir County in league with the White
Army, a loose band of armed youths from the vice-president's Nuer ethnic
community.
Tensions spiked earlier this
month when an estimated 6,000 White Army combatants overran a military
encampment in Nasir.
An attempted rescue attempt by
the United Nations led to the death of a UN helicopter pilot and senior South
Sudanese general.
Lueth also confirmed the
presence of Ugandan forces in Juba on a "military pact", a week after
denying their deployment to South Sudan.
Last week Ugandan army chief
Muhoozi Kainerugaba said Ugandan special forces "entered Juba to secure
it".
The rising unrest has sparked
international concern, with the United Nations Commission on Human Rights in
South Sudan warning the country was seeing an "alarming regression"
that threatened to undo years of progress.
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