ReportWire

Tag: South Sudan

  • US Threatens Cuts to South Sudan Aid Over Humanitarian Fees

    NAIROBI, Dec 11 – The ‌United ​States threatened on Thursday to ‌reduce its foreign assistance to South Sudan unless Juba ​lifts what it said were illicit fees on humanitarian shipments.

    In an unusually pointed ‍statement entitled “Time to Stop ​Taking Advantage of the United States,” the U.S. Bureau of African ​Affairs accused ⁠South Sudan’s government of “imposing exorbitant fees on humanitarian shipments” and “obstructing U.N. peacekeeping operations”.

    South Sudan’s humanitarian affairs minister did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

    The U.S., which has carried out rapid and deep cuts ‌to foreign aid this year, is the largest humanitarian donor to ​South ‌Sudan. The country of ‍12 million ⁠has been ravaged by conflict since winning independence from Sudan in 2011.

    Foreign donors have repeatedly objected to attempts by South Sudanese authorities to collect taxes on humanitarian imports. 

    “These actions constitute egregious violations of South Sudan’s international obligations,” the U.S. statement said.

    “We call on the transitional government to halt these actions ​immediately. If it does not, the United States will initiate a comprehensive review of our foreign assistance in South Sudan with the likelihood of making significant reductions,” the statement added.

    Armed conflict has persisted in much of South Sudan since the end in 2018 of a five-year civil war that killed an estimated 400,000 people. 

    U.N. investigators, however, said in a report in September that corruption by political elites was the biggest driver of a ​humanitarian crisis in which most South Sudanese are facing crisis levels of hunger.

    Juba rejected that conclusion, attributing the country’s humanitarian problems to conflict, climate change and disruptions to oil exports caused ​by the war in neighbouring Sudan.

    (Reporting by Ammu Kannampilly; Editing by Aaron Ross, Aidan Lewis)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    Reuters

    Source link

  • Trump says he is ending deportation protections for Somalis in Minnesota

    President Trump on Friday said he is ending deportation protections for Somali immigrants in Minnesota.

    The president wrote on his Truth Social platform that he was “terminating effective immediately, the Temporary Protected Status (TPS Program) for Somalis in Minnesota.”

    Mr. Trump said, without providing evidence, that “Somali gangs are terrorizing the people of that great State.”

    He also accused Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, without proof, of overseeing a state that had become a “hub of fraudulent money laundering activity.”

    “Send them back to where they came from,” he said. “It’s OVER!”

    In response, Walz said in a social media post on X, “It’s not surprising that the President has chosen to broadly target an entire community. This is what he does to change the subject.”

    The president did not provide further details on the move.   

    TPS is a federal program that allows migrants from unstable countries to live and work legally in the U.S.

    Somalia’s TPS designation runs through March 17, 2026, according to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, an agency that is part of the Department of Homeland Security. As of March 31, there are 705 Somali immigrants in the U.S. approved for TPS, according to Congress.gov. Minnesota also has the largest Somali population in the U.S., the Associated Press reports. 

    CBS News has reached out to DHS and Walz for comment.  

    The Trump administration has also moved to end TPS protections for AfghanVenezuelan, Syrian and South Sudanese nationals. Those actions have faced significant legal challenges. 

    Republican Minnesota House Speaker Lisa Demuth, who represents Cold Spring, said in a written statement that she’s “glad” that Mr. Trump recognizes the “seriousness of the fraud problem” in the state. 

    “The unfortunate reality is that far too many individuals who were welcomed into this country have abused the trust and support that was extended to them, and Minnesota taxpayers have suffered billions of dollars in consequences as a result,” Demuth said, without providing evidence.

    Jaylani Hussein, president of the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations decried the move Friday, saying in a statement that the group was “deeply disappointed that the administration has chosen to end the Somali TPS program in Minnesota, a legal lifeline for families who have built their lives here for decades.”

    “This is not just a bureaucratic change; it is a political attack on the Somali and Muslim community driven by Islamophobic and hateful rhetoric,” Hussein said. “We strongly urge President Trump to reverse this misguided decision.”

    Faris Tanyos

    Source link

  • Trump says he is ending deportation protections for Somalis in Minnesota

    President Trump on Friday said he is ending deportation protections for Somali immigrants in Minnesota.

    The president wrote on his Truth Social platform that he was “terminating effective immediately, the Temporary Protected Status (TPS Program) for Somalis in Minnesota.”

    As of March 31, there are 705 Somali immigrants in the U.S. approved for TPS, according to Congress.gov.

    Mr. Trump said, without providing evidence, that “Somali gangs are terrorizing the people of that great State.”

    He also accused Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, without proof, of overseeing a state that had become a “hub of fraudulent money laundering activity.”

    “Send them back to where they came from,” he said. “It’s OVER!”

    The president did not provide further details on the move.   

    TPS is a federal program that allows migrants from unstable countries to live and work legally in the U.S.

    Somalia’s TPS designation runs through March 17, 2026, according to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, an agency that is part of the Department of Homeland Security.  

    Minnesota House Speaker Lisa Demuth, R-Cold Spring, said in a written statement that she’s “glad” that Mr. Trump recognizes the “seriousness of the fraud problem” in the state. 

    “The unfortunate reality is that far too many individuals who were welcomed into this country have abused the trust and support that was extended to them, and Minnesota taxpayers have suffered billions of dollars in consequences as a result,” Demuth said, without providing evidence.

    CBS News has reached out to DHS, Gov. Walz and Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith of Minnesota for comment.

    The Trump administration has also moved to end TPS protections for AfghanVenezuelan and South Sudanese nationals. Those actions have faced significant legal challenges. 

    This is a developing story and will be updated.   

    Source link

  • South Sudan’s Kiir Re-Appoints Former VP After Sacking Ally

    JUBA (Reuters) -South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir has re-appointed his former vice president James Wani Igga to the same position, the state broadcaster said, after dismissing a powerful ally who had been widely seen as a potential successor.

    Fears of a return to civil war are growing as uncertainty surrounds the succession of the 74-year-old Kiir, who has repeatedly sacked, reinstated and, sometimes, once again sacked senior officials.

    Analysts see the moves as being aimed at placating diverse constituencies and navigating turbulent political moments.

    Igga, a former speaker of the House, previously served as Kiir’s vice president from 2013 until he was sacked in February.

    Then, last week, Benjamin Bol Mel, the close Kiir ally who had held the office for about nine months was suddenly fired, along with the central bank governor and other officials.

    Kiir also fired and re-appointed several other officials in Monday’s decree read on state broadcaster, South Sudan Broadcasting Corp.

    They included the long-serving information minister, Michael Makuei, transferred to the justice ministry while Mabior Garang De Mabior, the son of South Sudan’s founding father, John Garang, was named minister for environment forestry.

    South Sudan has five vice presidents under the terms of a peace pact that ended its civil war in 2018, which meant that from 2018 Igga was joined by four others including Kiir’s key rival Riek Machar in the role of first vice president.

    Machar is being tried on charges of treason after he was put under house arrest in March.

    (Writing by Elias Biryabarema; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    Reuters

    Source link

  • South Sudan leader sacks powerful vice-president in shock move

    South Sudan’s leader Salva Kiir has in a shock move dismissed one of his vice-presidents, Benjamin Bol Mel, who had been tipped as his possible successor.

    Kiir stripped Bol Mel of his military rank of general and dismissed him from the national security service. He also sacked the central bank governor and the head of the revenue authority, both considered close allies of Bol Mel.

    No explanation was given for the dismissals, which were announced in a decree broadcast on state television.

    It comes when there are growing fears of political instability and a possible return to civil war, after the recent collapse of a fragile power-sharing agreement between Kiir and opposition leader Riek Machar.

    Bol Mel, 47, was only appointed vice-president in February, replacing James Wani Igga, a veteran politician and general.

    He was also elevated to become the first deputy chairman of the ruling SPLM party, which analysts believe gave him more powers and positioned him as a potential successor to the 74-year-old Kiir. The president later promoted him to the full rank of a general in the National Security Service (NSS).

    Bol Mel’s promotion came despite the US placing sanctions against him for alleged corruption in 2017, which were renewed earlier this year. The US Treasury described Bol Mel as Kiir’s “principal financial advisor”. Kiir’s office denied the description.

    Bol Mel has never directly responded to the corruption accusations against him and has not commented on his sacking.

    The president has not announced replacements in any of the positions he held.

    His dismissal follows speculation on social media about an internal power struggle in the SPLM.

    A senior government official, who preferred to remain anonymous for safety reasons, told the BBC that Bol Mel had been a “divisive figure” in government.

    “It’s good that he has gone,” he said.

    A taxi driver in the capital, Juba, also welcomed the dismissal.

    “Everybody hates this man. Even in his home town of Aweil people celebrated his dismissal. We are happy for President Kiir,” he told the BBC.

    Hours before Bol Mel’s sacking, his security detail was reportedly withdrawn from his residence and office in the capital, Juba.

    South Sudan is an oil-rich nation that became the world’s newest country in 2011 after seceding from Sudan. It was engulfed by civil war two years later, after Kiir and Machar fell out.

    The 2018 power-sharing agreement that ended the war has been fraught with challenges, as tensions persist and sporadic violence continues to erupt.

    Planned elections have been postponed twice in the past three years and fighting between forces loyal to the president and armed groups has recently escalated.

    Machar was sacked as vice-president and arrested earlier this year and in September charged with murder, treason and crimes against humanity in a move seen as aggravating tensions and sparking fears of renewed civil unrest. The case is ongoing.

    His spokesperson described the charges against him as a “political witch-hunt”.

    The charges followed an attack by a militia allegedly linked to Machar, which the government said had killed 250 soldiers and a general.

    More about South Sudan from the BBC:

    [Getty Images/BBC]

    Go to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.

    Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica

    BBC Africa podcasts

    Source link

  • US to End Protected Status for South Sudanese Nationals -CBS

    (Reuters) -The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is planning to end temporary protected status for South Sudanese nationals shortly, which has been in place for more than a decade, CBS News reported on Wednesday, citing DHS officials.

    (Reporting by Maiya Keidan; editing by Susan Heavey)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    Reuters

    Source link

  • UN Security Council Condemns RSF Assault on Sudan’s Al-Fashir

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The United Nations Security Council on Thursday condemned an assault by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces on al-Fashir in Sudan’s North Darfur, expressing grave concern in a statement “at the heightened risk of large-scale atrocities, including ethnically motivated atrocities.”

    (Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Caitlin Webber)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    Reuters

    Source link

  • UN says ‘hundreds of thousands’ trapped amid fighting in Sudan

    Hundreds of thousands of civilians are trapped amid an escalation of fighting in El Fasher, the capital of Sudan’s North Darfur state, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said on Sunday.

    “With fighters pushing further into the city and escape routes cut off, hundreds of thousands of civilians are trapped and terrified – shelled, starving, and without access to food, healthcare, or safety,” said UN emergency relief coordinator Tom Fletcher.

    Fletcher said he was “deeply alarmed by reports of civilian casualties and forced displacement,” calling for “an immediate ceasefire in El Fasher, across Darfur and throughout Sudan.”

    “Civilians must be allowed safe passage and be able to access aid. Those fleeing to safer areas must be allowed to do so safely and in dignity. Those who stay – including local responders – must be protected. Attacks on civilians, hospitals and humanitarian operations must stop immediately.”

    According to UN estimates, around 300,000 people are living in desperate conditions in El Fasher, which has been cut off for more than a year.

    The paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has taken El Fasher, the last government-controlled city in the Darfur region, according to its own statements.

    The military did not initially comment on this. According to media reports, fighting continues in the capital of North Darfur state. The information could not initially be independently verified.

    Sudan’s de facto ruler, Abdel-Fattah al-Burhan, has been locked in a bloody power struggle with RSF leader Mohamed Hamdan Daglo since April 2023. Both sides have been accused of serious human rights violations.

    The UN considers the situation to be the world’s biggest humanitarian crisis, with more than 12 million people displaced and more than 26 million facing starvation – about half the country’s population – are suffering from acute hunger. The regions of Darfur and Kordofan, currently controlled by the RSF, are particularly affected.

    Source link

  • UN Agency Says 13.7 Million People Face Severe Hunger Due to Global Aid Cuts

    ROME (Reuters) -Almost 14 million people in Afghanistan, Democratic Republic of Congo, Haiti, Somalia, South Sudan and Sudan risk severe hunger due to cuts in global humanitarian aid, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) warned on Wednesday.

    The WFP’s biggest donor, the United States, has slashed its foreign aid under President Donald Trump, and other major nations have also made or announced cuts in development and humanitarian assistance.

    “WFP’s funding has never been more challenged. The agency expects to receive 40% less funding for 2025, resulting in a projected budget of $6.4 billion, down from $10 billion in 2024,” the Rome-based agency said.

    A WFP report, titled “A Lifeline at Risk”, warned that cuts to its food assistance could push 13.7 million people from “crisis” to “emergency” levels of hunger, one step away from famine in a five-level international hunger scale.

    “The gap between what WFP needs to do and what we can afford to do has never been larger. We are at risk of losing decades of progress in the fight against hunger,” WFP executive director Cindy McCain said.

    “It’s not just the countries engulfed in major emergencies. Even hard-won gains in the Sahel region, where 500,000 people have been lifted out of aid dependence, could experience severe setbacks without help, and we want to prevent that,” she added.

    (Reporting by Alvise Armellini, editing by Gavin Jones)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    Reuters

    Source link

  • Conflict sends 300,000 people fleeing from South Sudan in 2025: UN

    About 300,000 people have fled South Sudan so far in 2025 as armed conflict between rival leaders threatens civil war, the United Nations warns.

    The mass displacement was reported on Monday by the UN Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan. The report cautioned that the conflict between President Salva Kiir and suspended First Vice President Riek Machar risks a return to full-scale war.

    The commission’s report called for an urgent regional intervention to prevent the country from sliding towards such a tragic event.

    South Sudan has been beset by political instability and ethnic violence since it gained independence from Sudan in 2011.

    The country plunged into civil war in 2013 when Kiir dismissed Machar as vice president. The pair agreed a ceasefire in 2017, but their fragile power-sharing agreement has been unravelling for months and was suspended last month amid outbreaks of violence among forces loyal to each.

    Machar was placed under house arrest in March after fighting between the military and an ethnic Nuer militia in the northeastern town of Nasir killed dozens of people and displaced more than 80,000.

    He was charged with treason, murder and crimes against humanity in September although his lawyer argued the court lacked jurisdiction. Kiir suspended Machar from his position in early October.

    Machar rejects the charges with his spokesman calling them a “political witch-hunt”.

    Renewed clashes in South Sudan have driven almost 150,000 people to Sudan, where a civil war has raged for two years, and a similar number into neighbouring Uganda, Ethiopia and as far as Kenya.

    More than 2.5 million South Sudanese refugees now live in neighbouring countries while two million remain internally displaced.

    The commission linked the current crisis to corruption and lack of accountability among South Sudan’s leaders.

    “The ongoing political crisis, increasing fighting and unchecked, systemic corruption are all symptoms of the failure of leadership,” Commissioner Barney Afako said.

    “The crisis is the result of deliberate choices made by its leaders to put their interests above those of their people,” Commission Chairwoman Yasmin Sooka said.

    A UN report in September detailed significant corruption, alleging that $1.7bn from an oil-for-roads programme remains unaccounted for while three-quarters of the country faces severe food shortages.

    Commissioner Barney Afako warned that without immediate regional engagement, South Sudan risks catastrophic consequences.

    “South Sudanese are looking to the African Union and the region to rescue them from a preventable fate,” he said.

    Source link

  • South Sudan President Fires Military Chief After Three Months, Reinstates Predecessor

    JUBA (Reuters) -South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir has removed the country’s military chief and reinstated his predecessor whom Kiir had sacked three months earlier, state-run television announced.

    The moves add to relentless turnover within the ranks of South Sudan’s military and government as Kiir contends with armed conflict and speculation within the country about his eventual succession.

    Kiir, 74, has led a transitional government in the impoverished and fractured nation since independence from Sudan in 2011. Scheduled elections have twice been postponed and First Vice President Riek Machar, Kiir’s main rival during a 2013-2018 civil war, was charged last month with treason.

    The South Sudan Broadcasting Corporation announced late on Wednesday that Kiir had appointed Paul Nang Majok to replace Dau Aturjong as the new Chief of Defence Forces, without providing a reason for the decision.

    Aturjong was reassigned to be a technical adviser at the defence ministry.

    In July, Kiir had, without explanation, sacked Majok after seven months in the post and replaced him with Aturjong.

    That decision came after renewed fighting in the northeast in which the military was briefly overrun by a militia from Machar’s Nuer ethnic group.

    The government placed Machar under house arrest in March, accusing him of supporting the militia, and he went on trial for treason, murder and crimes against humanity last month. Machar has denied the allegations.

    His detention reignited fears of a return to full-blown civil war, with his supporters accusing the government of violating a 2018 peace and power-sharing agreement.

    Analysts say that Kiir’s repeated shake-ups of the government and security apparatus are aimed at consolidating his hold on power and keeping various factions satisfied.

    U.N. investigators last month accused South Sudanese leaders of “systematic looting” of the nation’s wealth for their personal gain.

    (Reporting by Denis Logonyi; Editing by Elias Biryabarema, Aaron Ross and Ros Russell)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    Reuters

    Source link

  • South Sudan court rejects ex-VP’s bid to halt murder and treason trial

    Riek Machar has been under house arrest since March [AFP via Getty Images]

    A special court in South Sudan has ruled that it does have the jurisdiction to prosecute suspended Vice-President Riek Machar and seven co-accused, who are charged with murder, treason and crimes against humanity.

    The court dismissed all objections by Machar’s legal team regarding its authority, the constitutionality of the proceedings, and the claim that he was immune from prosecution. The case will continue on Wednesday.

    Machar has dismissed the charges brought against him two weeks ago as a political “witch-hunt”. They have raised fears of return to civil war.

    The charges stem from an attack in March by a militia allegedly linked to Machar, which killed 250 soldiers and a general.

    Since then, he has been under house arrest.

    Machar’s defence team had argued that the alleged crimes should not be tried by a national court but by a hybrid court under the African Union, in accordance with the 2018 Peace Agreement that ended the five-year civil war between his forces and those loyal to President Salva Kiir.

    The court however argued that it had the authority to try national offences, as a hybrid court had not yet been established.

    “The special court enjoys jurisdiction to try this case according to the Transitional Constitution 2011 as amended,” Presiding Judge James Alala ruled.

    It also dismissed the argument by Machar’s team that he had immunity from prosecution, adding that the provision only applied to the president.

    “The First Vice-President does not have constitutional immunity, according to the transitional constitution,” the judge ruled.

    The court also expelled two of Machar’s lawyers after the prosecution argued that they did not have valid licences.

    The presiding judge ruled that the two can only participate once they have renewed their licences.

    The charges have sparked fears of renewed conflict in the country, with the UN, African Union and neighbouring countries all calling for calm in the world’s newest country, which only gained independence from Sudan in 2011 following decades of war.

    More about South Sudan from the BBC:

    A woman looking at her mobile phone and the graphic BBC News Africa

    [Getty Images/BBC]

    Go to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.

    Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica

    BBC Africa podcasts

    Source link

  • South Sudan vice-president charged with murder and treason

    South Sudan’s First Vice-President Riek Machar has been charged with murder, treason and crimes against humanity in a move that some fear could reignite the country’s civil war.

    Justice Minister Joseph Geng Akech said the charges against Machar relate to an attack in March by a militia allegedly linked to the vice-president.

    The roads leading to his house in the capital, Juba, have been blocked by tanks and soldiers.

    Forces loyal to Machar fought a five-year civil war against those backing President Salva Kiir until a 2018 peace deal ending the fighting in the world’s newest country.

    Machar has been under house arrest since March, with the UN, African Union and neighbouring countries all calling for calm.

    The 2018 peace deal ended the conflict that had killed nearly 400,000 people, however the relationship between Machar and Kiir has become increasingly strained amid ethnic tensions and sporadic violence.

    The March attack was carried out by the White Ant militia, largely made up of fighters from the Nuer ethnic group, the same as Machar.

    They overran an army base in the north-eastern town of Nasir, reportedly killing 250 soldiers and a general. A UN helicopter also came under fire, leading to the death of its pilot.

    South Sudan gained its independence from Sudan in 2011 following decades of conflict.

    But within two years, civil war broke out.

    Additional reporting by the BBC’s Nichola Mandil in Juba

    You may also be interested in:

    [Getty Images/BBC]

    Go to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.

    Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica

    BBC Africa podcasts

    Source link

  • South Sudan repatriates Mexican man deported from U.S. in July

    South Sudan said Saturday it repatriated to Mexico a man deported from the United States in July.

    The man, a Mexican identified as Jesus Munoz-Gutierrez, was among a group of eight who had been in government custody in the East African country since their deportation from the U.S.

    His repatriation to Mexico was carried out by South Sudan’s foreign ministry in concert with the Mexican Embassy in neighboring Ethiopia, the South Sudanese foreign ministry said in a statement.

    Jesus Munoz Gutierrez, a Mexican migrant deported months ago to South Sudan by the United States.

    Deng Machol / AP


    The repatriation was carried out “in full accordance with relevant international law, bilateral agreements, and established diplomatic protocols,” it said.

    Rights groups have argued that the Trump administration’s increasing practice of deporting migrants to third countries violated international law and the basic rights of migrants.

    The deportations have faced opposition by courts in the U.S., though the Supreme Court in June allowed the government to restart swift removals of migrants to countries other than their homelands.

    It is unclear whether Gutierrez and other deportees had access to legal representation. 

    The group of eight men was convicted of serious crimes — including murder, homicide, sexual assault, lascivious acts with a child and robbery — in the United States, the Trump administration said. None of the deportees is from South Sudan — the others hail from Cuba, Laos, Myanmar, Sudan and Vietnam.

    img-8524.jpg

    Eight men from Asia and Latin America were deported from the United States to South Sudan in July 2025 after a weeks-long legal fight.

    U.S. Department of Homeland Security


    The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has said that Gutierrez had a conviction for second-degree murder and was sentenced to life in prison.

    The deportations signify a major political victory for the Trump administration, which has sought to convince countries around the world — irrespective of their human rights record — to accept deportees who are not their citizens.

    Other African nations receiving deportees from the U.S. include Uganda, Eswatini and Rwanda. Eswatini, in southern Africa, received five men with criminal backgrounds in July. Rwanda announced the arrival of a group of seven deportees in mid-August.

    contributed to this report.

    Source link

  • US seeks to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Uganda after he refuses plea offer

    Immigration officials said they intend to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Uganda, after he declined an offer to be deported to Costa Rica in exchange for remaining in jail and pleading guilty to human smuggling charges, according to a Saturday court filing.The Costa Rica offer came late Thursday, after it was clear that the Salvadoran national would likely be released from a Tennessee jail the following day. Abrego Garcia declined to extend his stay in jail and was released on Friday to await trial in Maryland with his family. Later that day, the Department of Homeland Security notified his attorneys that he would be deported to Uganda and should report to immigration authorities on Monday.His attorneys declined to comment on whether the plea offer had been formally rescinded. The brief they filed only said that Abrego Garcia had declined one part of the offer — to remain in jail — and that his attorneys would “communicate the government’s proposal to Mr. Abrego.”Abrego Garcia’s case became a flashpoint in President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda after he was mistakenly deported in March. Facing a court order, the Trump administration brought him back to the U.S. in June, only to detain him on human smuggling charges.He has pleaded not guilty and has asked the judge to dismiss the case, claiming that it is an attempt to punish him for challenging his deportation to El Salvador. The Saturday filing came as a supplement to that motion to dismiss, stating that the threat to deport him to Uganda is more proof that the prosecution is vindictive.“The government immediately responded to Mr. Abrego’s release with outrage,” the filing reads. “Despite having requested and received assurances from the government of Costa Rica that Mr. Abrego would be accepted there, within minutes of his release from pretrial custody, an ICE representative informed Mr. Abrego’s counsel that the government intended to deport Mr. Abrego to Uganda and ordered him to report to ICE’s Baltimore Field Office Monday morning.”Although Abrego Garcia was deemed eligible for pretrial release, he had remained in jail at the request of his attorneys, who feared the Republican administration could try to immediately deport him again if he were freed. Those fears were somewhat allayed by a recent ruling in a separate case in Maryland, which requires immigration officials to allow Abrego Garcia time to mount a defense.

    Immigration officials said they intend to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Uganda, after he declined an offer to be deported to Costa Rica in exchange for remaining in jail and pleading guilty to human smuggling charges, according to a Saturday court filing.

    The Costa Rica offer came late Thursday, after it was clear that the Salvadoran national would likely be released from a Tennessee jail the following day. Abrego Garcia declined to extend his stay in jail and was released on Friday to await trial in Maryland with his family. Later that day, the Department of Homeland Security notified his attorneys that he would be deported to Uganda and should report to immigration authorities on Monday.

    His attorneys declined to comment on whether the plea offer had been formally rescinded. The brief they filed only said that Abrego Garcia had declined one part of the offer — to remain in jail — and that his attorneys would “communicate the government’s proposal to Mr. Abrego.”

    Abrego Garcia’s case became a flashpoint in President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda after he was mistakenly deported in March. Facing a court order, the Trump administration brought him back to the U.S. in June, only to detain him on human smuggling charges.

    He has pleaded not guilty and has asked the judge to dismiss the case, claiming that it is an attempt to punish him for challenging his deportation to El Salvador. The Saturday filing came as a supplement to that motion to dismiss, stating that the threat to deport him to Uganda is more proof that the prosecution is vindictive.

    “The government immediately responded to Mr. Abrego’s release with outrage,” the filing reads. “Despite having requested and received assurances from the government of Costa Rica that Mr. Abrego would be accepted there, within minutes of his release from pretrial custody, an ICE representative informed Mr. Abrego’s counsel that the government intended to deport Mr. Abrego to Uganda and ordered him to report to ICE’s Baltimore Field Office Monday morning.”

    Although Abrego Garcia was deemed eligible for pretrial release, he had remained in jail at the request of his attorneys, who feared the Republican administration could try to immediately deport him again if he were freed. Those fears were somewhat allayed by a recent ruling in a separate case in Maryland, which requires immigration officials to allow Abrego Garcia time to mount a defense.

    Source link

  • Children die daily at a South Sudan border camp while they wait for international aid | CNN

    Children die daily at a South Sudan border camp while they wait for international aid | CNN


    Renk, South Sudan
    CNN
     — 

    His worn trousers bagging over the top of borrowed rubber rain boots, Kueaa Darhok attempts to make his way through the sucking mud and deep-set puddles, on his way to the communal feeding kitchen at the center of the transit camp he now calls home.

    There, under his calming gaze and soft-spoken reassurances, Sudanese refugees and returning South Sudanese wait as aid workers and local women ladle through steel pots filled with lentils and porridge.

    In Sudan, Darhok, who is of South Sudanese origin, was the headmaster of an English language secondary school in the capital Khartoum, where he taught his students texts by legendary African authors like Chinua Achebe to instil in them, he says, a sense of cultural pride.

    After fighting broke out over two months ago in Khartoum, he and his family made the terrifying journey back to South Sudan and he has become a community elder here at the camp.

    Set up a week into the fighting in Sudan, when desperate families arrived seeking shelter, the Renk transit camp near the border of South Sudan and Sudan was not supposed to hold more than 3,000 people. It now houses more than double that. There are no sanitation facilities, not enough waterproof sheets and not enough food. Not enough of anything.

    “I eat once a day, sometimes not even that,” Darhok says, keeping an eye on the meal distribution. “Most of the men here are the same, so that the most vulnerable – the women and children – can eat.”

    Even then, Darhok says, not all those queuing up will get food, and they’ll return to expectant families empty-handed.

    At least 800,000 South Sudanese have returned home to escape fighting in Sudan.

    The UN estimates at least 860 people have been killed since fighting erupted on April 15 between Sudan’s Armed Forces and the rival paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

    With 6,000 people injured across Sudan as of June 3, half a million people have fled the country and more than 1.4 million are internally displaced.

    Blighted by decades of fighting both before and after independence from the Republic of Sudan, South Sudan was already Africa’s largest refugee crisis, with 2.2 million people displaced outside the country’s borders and 2.3 million internally displaced. Now at least 800,000 South Sudanese have been driven back by the fighting in Sudan.

    A spokesperson for the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Renk, Charlotte Hallqvist told CNN that an average of 1,500 people have been arriving daily since the fighting began in Sudan, adding to the burden of a country where 75% of the population are in need of assistance.

    Hallqvist says the UN’s emergency response was already critically underfunded, “and the new emergency is adding additional strain to already limited resources.”

    Families with children are staying in rudimentary shelters as they wait for a more permanent place to settle.

    To respond to the Sudan crisis, the UN needs $253 million, with the South Sudan response alone in need of $96 million.

    According to UNHCR figures, two months into the crisis, international donors have so far only contributed 10% of the total figure, and 15% of the overall Sudan regional emergency response.

    On June 19, the United Nations, the governments of the Arab Republic of Egypt, the Federal Republic of Germany, the State of Qatar and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the African Union and the European Union will convene a High-level Pledging Event to support the humanitarian response in Sudan and the region in a bid to drive up donor contributions.

    For many here in Renk, it’s too late; the international community’s delayed response has already cost lives.

    Malnutrition and unsanitary conditions are triggering an epidemic of communicable diseases, and every day, Darhok tells us, a little boy or girl dies.

    A CNN team visiting the camp witnessed the burial of one boy, not quite two-years-old, who had died in the early hours of that morning from measles.

    His mother and grandmother sat in shocked silence as men shoveled earth onto his grave at the local cemetery, pausing to plant a spindly wooden cross before heading back to their own tents and their own vulnerable families, carrying with them the specter of a death that could have been prevented.

    Source link

  • South Sudan’s sluggish peace deal and unsteady road to elections

    South Sudan’s sluggish peace deal and unsteady road to elections

    KOWACH, South Sudan (AP) — Martha Nyanguour didn’t have time to bury her husband, son or granddaughter when they were killed by gunfire in September. Instead, the 50-year-old paid her respects by throwing bits of grass over their bodies, grabbed her remaining children and fled.

    It had taken years for the mother of seven to muster the courage to return to South Sudan and trust its fragile peace deal ending a civil war. But weeks after she arrived in Atar town in Upper Nile state, fighting erupted between militias aligned with government and opposition forces.

    “I thought if there was peace I was supposed to go back to my land,” said Nyanguour, seated under a tree in Kowach village in Canal Pigi county where she now lives with thousands of other displaced people, five days’ walk through swamp water from her home village. “I thought maybe there would be peace in the future, but now, hearing gunshots daily, I think South Sudan will remain in war.”

    In 18 months, South Sudan is supposed to hold its first presidential elections, the culmination of the peace agreement signed nearly five years ago to pull the young nation out of fighting that killed some 400,000 people. While large-scale clashes have subsided, violence in parts of the country persists, killing 2,240 people last year, according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project. Earlier this month at least 20 people were killed and more than 50 wounded during inter-communal clashes in a United Nations protection camp in the north of the country.

    Implementation of the peace agreement has been sluggish. The elections, originally scheduled for this year, were postponed until December 2024. Other key elements of the deal have not been implemented, sparking concern that the country could see a return to war instead of a transfer of power.

    “We are going to go for (the) electoral process without meeting the benchmarks that create a conducive environment for the conduct of elections,” said Edmund Yakani, executive director for Community Empowerment for Progress Organization, a local advocacy group. “The return of the country to violence is more evident than the country staying in stability.”

    A permanent constitution still has not been drafted. A census has not been conducted. Security arrangements, considered the backbone of the agreement, are only partially complete. Some 83,000 soldiers from opposition and government forces are meant to unite in a national army, but so far 55,000 have graduated and are yet to be deployed.

    Others languish in training centers with poor conditions and little food. Soldiers say many are rarely paid. Locals involved with the security arrangements say there’s so little trust that the main parties have held back key fighters, sending less seasoned ones or new recruits.

    In addition, Joshua Craze, a researcher on South Sudan, says, “The peace agreement signed in 2018 has enabled the government to fragment the opposition by encouraging defections and setting commanders against each other, intensifying violent conflict.”

    The opposition accuses the government of lacking political will to hold elections so it can keep plundering the nation’s resources, which include oil. “They don’t have genuine political will to implement the peace agreement because they look at the agreement from the angle that it is crippling their powers,” said Puok Both Baluang, acting press secretary for the first vice president, head of the main opposition and former rebel leader Riek Machar.

    South Sudan has billions of dollars in reserves but there is little transparency on where the money goes. The country was voted the second most corrupt in the world last year by Transparency International.

    The international community is exasperated with South Sudan’s lack of progress.

    At a press conference in May, United Nations representative Nicholas Haysom cautioned that the conditions did not currently exist to hold transparent, free and fair elections. But some diplomats are concerned that another extension to the peace deal would send a negative message to South Sudanese citizens, investors and aid donors.

    The government says it’s serious about the peace process and will hold elections on time. During a conference in May on reconciliation and healing, President Salva Kiir vowed that “I will never take South Sudan and its people to war again.”

    The capital, Juba, appears peaceful. Billboards of Kiir and Machar shaking hands above the words “peace, unity, reconciliation and development” line the streets. Children of the political elites are returning with money and opening trendy restaurants, and construction is booming.

    But outside the capital is a different reality.

    The fighting that killed Nyanguour’s family last year also sent tens of thousands fleeing, part of the highest displacement levels since the peace agreement was signed, according to a report by a U.N. panel of experts. It said government and opposition forces played facilitating roles in the violence.

    The conflict in Upper Nile cut off access to healthcare, with some severely wounded people having to travel up to four days by canoe to the closest clinic, aid workers said. “The biggest issue was accessibility. It was hard to bring in supplies,” said Kudumreng David, a supervisor for the International Medical Corps in Kowach.

    Food has also become scarce as fighting worsens conditions after years of floods and cuts in food aid. In Kowach, some children rip leaves from trees into a pot for their only meal of the day.

    Many people outside Juba said they didn’t even know elections were set for next year.

    “We heard there’s peace but it hasn’t reached here,” said Roda Awel, a resident of Kowach. “People are still afraid.”

    Source link

  • South Sudan’s president calls on refugees to return home

    South Sudan’s president calls on refugees to return home

    JUBA, South Sudan (AP) — South Sudan’s president has urged the country’s more than 2 million refugees to return home in his first meeting with displaced people since civil war erupted almost a decade ago.

    President Salva Kiir’s appeal on Wednesday came as the country prepares to hold its first elections since gaining independence from Sudan in 2011. South Sudan’s delayed elections are set to take place in December 2024.

    South Sudan is still recovering from the five-year civil war that erupted in late 2013, killed hundreds of thousands of people and ended with a peace agreement in 2018. For a while, fleeing South Sudanese formed the world’s largest refugee camp in neighboring Uganda.

    The president’s meeting came two weeks after the visiting Pope Francis met with displaced South Sudanese in the capital, Juba, and appealed for lasting peace.

    “With peace implementation moving towards the final phase where elections will end the transitional period, repatriating our people from the camps in neighboring countries should top our agenda,” Kiir said.

    The president assured people returning to the country of their security, and he appealed to international partners to support the government in reintegrating returnees.

    “For those who will opt to return to their habitual areas of residence, the government will provide security,” Kiir said. Those who cannot return to their home communities will be allocated land in states where displacement camps are located, he said.

    Source link

  • Pope makes final appeal for peace at end of South Sudan trip

    Pope makes final appeal for peace at end of South Sudan trip

    Catholic church head joined other Christian leaders in calling for a recommitment to the 2018 peace deal during the Africa trip.

    Pope Francis has ended a trip to South Sudan with an impassioned plea for peace and forgiveness in the war-torn country.

    Francis made the appeal on Sunday as he presided over an open-air Mass attended by 100,000 people on the grounds of a mausoleum for South Sudan’s liberation hero John Garang in the capital Juba.

    He urged worshippers – including the country’s president and his opponents – to reject the “blind fury of violence”.

    Francis also called for an end to tribalism, financial wrongdoing and the alleged corruption at the root of many of the country’s problems, while advising attendees to build “good human relationships as a way of curbing the corruption of evil, the disease of division, the filth of fraudulent business dealings and the plague of injustice”.

    Women attend a mass by Pope Francis at the John Garang Mausoleum [Jok Solomun/Reuters]

    Many in the crowd sang, drummed and ululated as Francis entered the grounds. His homily was repeatedly interrupted by loud cheers.

    “Dear brothers and sisters, I return to Rome with you even closer to my heart,” he said. “Never lose hope. And lose no opportunity to build peace. May hope and peace dwell among you. May hope and peace dwell in South Sudan.”

    The visit marked the first time in Christian history that leaders of the Catholic, Anglican and Reformed traditions conducted a joint foreign trip, with the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, leader of the global Anglican Communion, and Iain Greenshields, moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, joining Francis for the “pilgrimage of peace”.

    The tour of the continent also included a stop in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, home to Africa’s largest Roman Catholic community, where Francis condemned what he called the foreign plundering of Africa.

    INTERACTIVE_POPE FRANCIS_PROFILE_JAN31_2023_2 (1)

    Francis has long shown interest in South Sudan, the world’s youngest country, which broke away from Sudan in 2011 but quickly devolved into a civil war that killed 400,000 people and forced millions of others to flee their homes. In one of the most remarkable gestures of his papacy, Francis in 2019 knelt to kiss the feet of the country’s previously warring leaders during a meeting at the Vatican.

    Still, despite a 2018 peace deal signed by President Salva Kiir, his longtime rival Riek Machar and other opposition groups, violence has persisted in some parts of the country. Violence in the country’s Central Equatoria state between cattle herders and members of an armed group left 27 dead on Thursday, a day before the pope arrived.

    Meanwhile, several of the agreement’s provisions, including the formation of a unified national army, remain largely unimplemented.

    The trip by the three Christian leaders sought a recommitment to the 2018 deal, while also highlighting the humanitarian situation in the country of nearly 11 million, which has been further beset by natural disasters and widespread poverty, despite having some of the largest crude oil reserves in sub-Saharan Africa.

    pope
    Pope Francis shakes hands with South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir Mayardit during a farewell ceremony before his departure in Juba, South Sudan [Vatican Media/­Reuters]

    Among the worshippers at Sunday’s Mass was Ferida Modon, 72, who lost three of her children to the conflict.

    “I want peace to come to South Sudan. Yes, I believe that his visit will change the situation. We are now tired of conflict,” she told the Reuters news agency. “We want God to listen to our prayers.”

    Jesilen Gaba, 42, a widow with four children, said: “The fact that the three Churches united for the sake of South Sudan, this is the turning point for peace. I want the visit to be a blessing to us. We have been at war, we have lost many people.”

    Source link

  • Map: Which countries has Pope Francis visited?

    Map: Which countries has Pope Francis visited?

    Pope Francis’ trip to the DRC is the first papal visit since John Paul II travelled there in 1985.

    Pope Francis is visiting the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and South Sudan this week.

    The 86-year-old leader of the Catholic church will start his trip on Tuesday in the Congolese capital Kinshasa before heading to Juba, the capital of South Sudan, on Friday.

    The Vatican’s envoy to the DRC, where Catholics make up about half of the population, has said the trip will remind the world not to ignore decades-long conflicts there.

    An estimated 5.7 million people are internally displaced in the DRC and 26 million face severe hunger, largely because of the impact of armed conflict by multiple rebel groups, according to the United Nations.

    (Al Jazeera)

    The trip will be Francis’s 40th abroad since he was elected supreme pontiff in 2013 following the resignation of his predecessor Pope Benedict XVI. Over the course of these trips, the pope has visited 59 countries.

    Pope Francis’ trip to the DRC is the first visit by a pope since John Paul II travelled there in 1985 – it was still known as Zaire at the time.

    The DRC is the second-largest country in Africa and has a population of some 90 million people. The Church runs about 40 percent of the country’s health facilities and about 6 million children are taught in Catholic schools.

    The countries the pope has visited include:

    Americas

    • Brazil: July 2013
    • Bolivia: July 2015
    • Ecuador: July 2015
    • Paraguay: July 2015
    • United States: September 2015
    • Cuba: September 2015, February 2016
    • Mexico: February 2016
    • Colombia: September 2017
    • Chile: January 2018
    • Peru: January 2018
    • Panama: January 2019
    • Canada: July 2022
    undefined
    Pope Francis waves to people from his popemobile in the Varginha slum, part of the Manguinhos slum complex in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, July 25, 2013.

    Asia

    • South Korea: August 2014
    • Sri Lanka: January 2015
    • Philippines: January 2015
    • Armenia: June 2016
    • Georgia: September 2016
    • Azerbaijan: October 2016
    • Myanmar: November 2017
    • Bangladesh: November 2017
    • Thailand: November 2019
    • Japan: November 2019
    • Kazakhstan: September 2022
    Pope Francis arrives at Yangon International Airport
    Pope Francis is welcomed as he arrives at Yangon International Airport, Myanmar November 27, 2017. [Max Rossi / REUTERS]

    Africa

    • Kenya: November 2015
    • Uganda: November 2015
    • Central African Republic: November 2015
    • Egypt: April 2017
    • Morocco: March 2019
    • Mozambique: September 2019
    • Madagascar: September 2019
    • Mauritius: September 2019
    • Democratic Republic of Congo: January 2023
    • South Sudan: February 2023 (planned)
    Pope Francis
    Pope Francis, centre-left, walks out in a procession after leading a Holy Mass for the Martyrs of Uganda at the Catholic Sanctuary in Namugongo, Kampala, Uganda, November 28, 2015 [Ben Curtis / AP Photo]

    Europe

    • Albania: September 2014
    • France: November 2014
    • Turkey: November 2014
    • Bosnia and Herzegovina: June 2015
    • Greece: April 2016
    • Poland: July 2016
    • Sweden: October 2016
    • Portugal: May 2017
    • Switzerland: June 2018
    • Ireland: August 2018
    • Estonia: September 2018
    • Latvia: September 2018
    • Lithuania: September 2018
    • Bulgaria: May 2019
    • North Macedonia: May 2019
    • Romania: May 2019
    • Hungary: September 2021
    • Slovakia: September 2021
    • Cyprus: December 2021
    • Greece: December 2021
    • Malta: April 2022
    Pope Francis speaks in the “Ambassadors' Chamber” of the Grand Master’s Palace in Valletta, Malta
    Pope Francis speaks in the Ambassadors’ Chamber of the Grand Master’s Palace in Valletta, Malta, on April 2, 2022 [Remo Casilli / REUTERS]

    Middle East

    • Israel: May 2014
    • Jordan: May 2014
    • Palestine: May 2014
    • United Arab Emirates: February 2019
    • Iraq: March 2019
    • Bahrain: November 2022
    Pope Francis
    Pope Francis laughs with Bahrain’s King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa at the Sakhir Palace during his apostolic journey, south of Manama, Bahrain, November 3, 2022 [Yara Nardi/Reuters]

    Source link