Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Major Problems in the United Nations Civilian Protection Sites (POCs) in South Sudan and the Refugees Camps in Borders

The paper discusses the Causes of Sexual Gender Based Violence (SGBV), gang rape outside the United Nations Protection (UNPOCs) sites in South Sudan; and refugee camps on the borders. It also explains R2P failure, humanitarian delivery aid mechanisms and the negative impact of Aid Distributions (do no harm) on lives of women and children and failure to meet the needs of women in particular. It explores workable concrete solutions to prevent (SGBV), gang rape crimes as well as provides the UN peacekeeping force in country with some ideas how to protect IDPs in POCs, which could reduce (SGBV) in the current political and humanitarian crisis in South Sudan. In addition to this, its addresses the role regional forces can play to protect Internal Displaced Persons (IDPs) in UNPOC Sites in South Sudan as well as refugee camps outside South Sudan. 

The paper does not go into the question of SGBV within the UNPOCs or sites and the refugee camps. It seems the major problem is outside the POCs sites and it draws conclusion with recommendations.

It argues that, it is time for United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) to move from an inactive stance and face its failure to protect civilians; reexamine critically its culture of report writing, its system of distributions of solid food aid; its ignoring the need for distributing firewood or providing solar cooking stoves; its inadequate medical centres for (SGBV) victims; and the logistical gaps that affect the investigative body with the mandate to document (SGBV) crimes and preserve evidences for future persecutions, namely the Human Rights Commissioners (OHCHR, 2017).[1]  The paper commences with (SGBV).

The other issue is the culture of reporting within the UN system. The culture of reporting has never yielded substantive results on the ground as well as improves safety of women IDPs in both Darfur camps and POCs in both Sudans.

There were many reports and cases well documented by the UN investigators that covered SGBV cases, but the situations remained the same and IDPs still in the camps and POCs sites. For example, from July 2016 to January 2017, Human Rights Violations and Abuses report was jointly documented by the UNMISS and the OHCHR. The report detailed human rights crimes and violations and UN system still inactive and failed to




[1] The Human Rights Commission was established under the auspices of the United Nations with mandate to monitor, investigate, verify and report on abuses, violations of human rights, violations of International humanitarian law and the most serious crimes in South Sudan since December 2013 by inter alia collecting and preserving evidences of human rights violations and abuses and violation of international Humanitarian Law and by supporting criminal proceedings before the hybrid court and national, regional and international tribunals with jurisdiction over such crimes (OHCHR 2017).


provide protections and safety to POCs populations in South Sudan (UNMISS/OHCHR 2017).  

1.  The Causes of Sexual Gender Based Violence (SGBV).
The frequent SGBV crimes against women, girls and boys around and outside UNPOCs sites and refugee camps are some examples of failure of R2P and the UNMISS. Failure of R2P in poor military protection of civilians specially women victims of gang rape who were caught up in search for firewood and absence of patrolling areas around UNPOCs sites and roads leading to markets. Additionally, it seems that there was lack of positive interactions between IDPs populations in the POCs and peacekeeping forces. The positive interactions, is the most important elements of R2P and UNMISS mandate in protection of citizens, vulnerable and defenseless women, young girls and boys who cannot defend themselves in this current civil war. The UNMISS and R2P failed to provide military protection, adequate food, womens’ needs as well as protections of women who ventured outside POCs sites in search of food and firewood and ended up victims of SGBV. 

The current rape data collected in South Sudan shows that the youngest patient treated due to rape and several times physical assault was a 5 year old boy. 33% of patients experienced sexual violence in South Sudan, 23% during the journey to Uganda, 19% at the border areas and 18% in the refugee settlement or reception centres (MSF Report 2017).

Below are stories of gang rape-  

Adot sought shelter at the POC site in Malakal UNMISS base on 24 December 2013. One morning a few days later, she left the base to collect firewood. When she was on her way back, and only a short distance from the base, four Nuer SPLA-IO soldiers attacked her.
“I saw four soldiers coming towards me. I tried to run but they told me they would shoot me if I ran… They asked me if my husband was alive. I did not reply. Then they told me to undress myself and to lay down. I refused and they started beating me with sticks. I realized that they were going to kill me if I continued resisting, so I undressed and laid down. Two of them held my legs and they told one of the others to put a stick into my vagina. So the soldier penetrated my vagina with a stick and I started bleeding immediately. I was brought back to the POC by women who also came to collect firewood. I was admitted in the hospital and stayed there for seven days.” (Amnesty International 2017: p.g27).

Seven government soldiers gang raped Nyabang on 20 July 2017 when she left the Juba POC site, intending to collect food from the World Food Programme warehouse on Yei Road, which she heard had been looted.
She recounted the words of her attackers:
“They spoke to me in Dinka, saying that I must be a Nuer woman. They told me, ‘You woman from Dr. Riek supporters…we are going to show you today. We are going to rape you and you will produce our kids through your vagina, your anus and your mouth’… all of them raped me… they penetrated my vagina, anus and even they inserted their penises inside my mouth… They raped me simply because I am a Nuer… They told me I should blame Dr. Riek Machar for what happened to me (ibid: p.g:36).
Nyabang told researchers that a military sergeant participated in gang raping her, along with six other soldiers, until she fell unconscious. His only instruction was that his subordinates should only rape her vaginally. She recounted, “He [the sergeant] ordered them saying, ‘Stop raping her through her anus, please use her vagina’. After that they decided to use my vagina (ibid: p.g. 37).

Some of the Nuer women attacked along Yei Road were abducted by government soldiers. On 27 July, Nyamachar made the difficult decision to leave the POC and go to the market.
“We [myself and other women] knew that it was very dangerous for Nuer women and men to move outside the PoCs for fear of being raped and killed. But for us women, we just closed our eyes to save our children from starvation. Our children were really dying of hunger in the POCs because we spent many days without food. Since the war broke out in July, the UN had never distributed food.”
On her way back from the market, Nyamachar encountered a large group of armed soldiers at the Yei Road checkpoint. One soldier forced her to enter his car and took her to a government military camp outside of Juba.
“He pushed me into the car and I was driven off … When we reached [the military camp], this soldier took me inside his room and raped me many times. He raped me immediately when we arrived, again after one hour, and again in the middle of the night. The following day, I discovered that there were some other Nuer women that they kept…as sex slaves…I stayed with this soldier for three days…[then] he called another soldier to come and rape me. This soldier raped me five times before they released me.”  Nyamachar said she spent approximately one week held in the military camp (ibid:p.g. 37).

Recently an attack in Juba, the capital city, was reported widely. Organized forces in military uniforms used color of their authority to rob, rape, and kill women, girls, boys and men in the day light and at night. On Oct 13th, in the absent of R2P in Juba, SPLA soldiers’ gang raped two young girls in Juba Muniki residential areas (News & Politics, Oct, 2017). It is safe to say that even non-IDP civilians in major cities have difficulties getting, finding and buying charcoal and food and fall prey to violence in overcoming these difficulties.


2-R2P Failure

My position is that, these cases of rape as described above could have been prevented if the R2P had been effective and efficient. Let us begin with what are R2P elements. It has become part of the mandate of UN peace keeping troops in South Sudan, where it was first initiated.

The UNMISS Mandate on peace keeping and protection

The United Nations Security Council Resolution 2155  (2014) of May 27th, 2014 mandated 12,500 UNMISS peacekeeping forces to protect civilians; monitoring and investigating human rights; creating the conditions for delivery of humanitarian assistance and supporting the implementation of “the 2014 Cessation of Hostilities Agreement (CoH)”.

The protection of civilians clauses (I), (II) and (V) state the following: To protect civilians under threat of physical violence, irrespective of the source of such violence, within its capacity and areas of deployment, with specific protection for women and children, including the continued use of the Mission’s child protection and women’s protection advisers; and to deter violence against civilians, including foreign nationals, especially through proactive deployment, active patrolling with particular attention to displaced civilians, including those in protection sites and refugee camps, humanitarian personnel and human rights defenders, and identification of threats and attacks against the civilian population, including through regular interaction with the civilian population and closely with humanitarian, human rights and development organizations, in areas at high risk of conflict including, as appropriate, schools, places of worship, hospitals and the oil installations, in particular when the Government of the Republic of South Sudan is unable or failing to provide such security (UNSC 2014).

Let us look at what is the practice in fact compared to the expectations of the mandate. For example, the current protection practices by the UNMISS constitute daily patrols during the day time in the major cities in South Sudan, cleaning (grabbed collection) of Juba city, directing traffic and pedestrians, teaching locals taekwondo, karate and cricket.2 Such activities to maintain do not serve, even violate, the mandate to protect victims from violence and to save (SGBV) all civilians from victimized by gang rapes carried out by any rebel groups or Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) military and its illegitimate ethnic dinka militants when they go in search of extra food, water and firewood to save their starving children from hunger in the UNPOC sites or refugee camps. Despite even their daylight patrols, the UN troops are unable to prevent the SGBV occurring as described above by actual victims. As there are no night patrols as of yet, though this is being discussed as necessary because of findings of report of the UN in August 2017,  any efforts to get food or firewood or water at night are totally unprotected by UN troops. Obviously this practice reveals even more clearly the ineffectiveness and inefficient of the R2P doctrine.[1]

Thus in summary the “Elements” of the R2P embrace three temporal phases:

1. The responsibility to prevent: to address both the root causes and direct causes of internal conflict and other human-made crises putting populations at risk.

2. The responsibility to react: to respond to situations of compelling human need with appropriate measures, which may include coercive measures like sanctions and international prosecution, and in extreme cases military intervention.

3. The responsibility to rebuild: to provide, particularly after a military intervention, full assistance with recovery, reconstruction and reconciliation, addressing the causes of the harm the intervention was designed to halt or avert (Weiss, 2006:p.23).

On Nov 11th, 2016, Mr. Adama Dieng, the United Nations envoy on genocide prevention visited Yei city. While in Yei, Mr. Dieng was encountered with stories of victims of tortures, detentions, and rapes. Among many Yei city’s IDPs population who voluntary appeared and testified before UN officials was Rev. Lasu. He was later arrested, tortured, murdered by the South Sudan national security (SSNS) agents and his body was found on the Yei –Juba road. This incidence suggests that, R2P and UNMISS failed to protect IDPs as well as to provide protection to human rights witness who came forward with information about crimes against humanity. Lacks of protections and patrolling have forced many IDPs to leave major cities in South Sudan at a high rate of 3,500 persons per day (UNHCR, 2017).
Lack of protections and safety of witnesses may also, deter many not to come forward with evidences and may not help work of human rights investigative body. This explains the basis of the obligation to report human rights abuses weaknesses of the reporting culture of UNMISS outside the peacekeeping troops who have the mandate to protect, also it raises many questions such as what are the terms of that mandate? What are problems of poor implementation?
The UN relied on the regional body of the African Union (AU) to do similar duties of UN human rights investigative body and this create duplication of work and AU has its own weaknesses in this field. Additionally, the body set up by the OHCHR and UNMISSES Human Rights to oversee human rights violations, but the body is inactive, and cannot guarantee witnesses safety in the country as well as this defeat the overall purpose and mandate of the body. Protecting, and providing safety to witnesses as well as documenting and preserving crimes evidence is the only way victims will have hope in international legal system, will deter rogue government form using their soldiers contrary to international humanitarian and human rights standards and rebel criminals as well.
3. Negative Impact of Aid Distributions on Women and Failure to meet the needs of women in particular

Under the R2P mandate the UN troops are to create the conditions for delivery of humanitarian assistance and support the implementation of “the 2014 Cessation of Hostilities Agreement”.

In order to create such conditions, the UN troops must be made aware of why protection has to be designed according to the needs of the civilians being protected and how not fulfilling these needs can expose them to danger and violence. In this regards the food and water culture in South Sudan plays a key role and is a key causes of the SGBV that women, children and boys sufferings from.

Food culture and fire wood collection in Sudan and South Sudan are the responsibility of women. Women’s daily activities consist of walking in groups for long distance early each morning and before sunset, during the day and evening to fetch water either from a river, or boreholes that are not near villages. Search for water around water sources are places where women socialize and offer social support to each other.

Water is used for drinking, washing needs, cooking traditional foods known as ugali and Kisra (flatbread), porridge, preparing tea, coffee and heating water for baths. This explains why the culture of preparing food in both Sudans takes more than five hours or so. Furthermore, cooking processes require fire wood, and most women in urbanized cities such as Juba, Malakal, Torit and Wau buy charcoal. However, these days, it is very difficult to find, get and buy charcoal and fire wood in markets across South Sudan. 

The reason is most charcoal and firewood traders have either left the village or been displaced due to insecurity. Insecurity and population displacement together triggered food and water insecurity.  The insecurity contributed to increased charcoal prices in the markets. For instance; the current price of one sack of charcoal is $2000SSP (average $16US) and before 2013, it was around $20SSP while average employee salary is $300SSP. In addition to this, for many there is no access to the markets at all, even if they could afford high prices, the economy has collapsed, farmers can no longer produce food, and public servants have not been pay for the last ten month or so.

Other factors contributing to rise of charcoal scarcity are most major natural forests are inhabited by different rebel groups and the major producer cities in Equatoria States are controlled  by SPLA soldiers and illegitimate ethnic dinka paramilitary of Mathiang Anyor3 that is carrying on targeted killings of civilians and traders on the roads (Johnson, 2016).
Thus, the issues of food/water availability and insecurity are major contributors to GBV, gang rape and armed attacks on civilians in the UN POC sites and refugee camps.

The aid packages delivered to the civilians in the UNPOC sites do not include as standard non-food items such as water, firewood, charcoal, solar ovens for cooking.
Since charcoal trade is number one factor leading to deforestation in both Sudans, it ideal that solar ovens can be perfect solution deforestation.
While the traditional IDP camps or refugee camps make provisions for water and cooking, the POC sites are at a disadvantage. The reason lies in the conditions under which the POC camps were created in South Sudan.

The term POC site is newly invented and it has entered the humanitarian lexicon after the 2013 political and humanitarian crisis in South Sudan. When conflict broke out between the forces loyal to Dinka President Kiir and those of former Nuer Vice President Machar, violence erupted and led civilians fled their neighborhoods with the hope to take safety at the UNMISS premises in the capital Juba.

When IDPs reached the  UNMISS gate, the peacekeeping forces prevented them from entering the UN compound in Tomping west of Juba Airport, but later on they were allowed after consultation between NY and UNSGR. This was the first time that IDPs physically ran into UN premises for safety- this was unusual.

Similarly, it was the first time that, UNMISS was faced with this situation, without guidance, ill-prepared, did not have contingency plans to receive and deal with needs of thousands of IDPs as well as providing protection for them. The 2013 violence which spread across the country creates new kinds of camps for IDPs, this time on UN premises.

This has generated several predicaments. Other UN agencies and NGOs are specialized in dealing with, organizing and managing IDP and refugee camps on sites provided by the national or local government.  They were not called in to manage the situation of IDPs in the UN peacekeeping compounds in South Sudan. To this day there is lack of coordination and communication with such agencies and NGOs. Even some NGOs are baffled, because they have distinct policies about limits to dealing with military troops or working in militarized environment. The dilemmas as how remain unresolved fully even with deployment of additional protection forces.

Another issue that stands out very clearly was the fact UN forces are not well-trained in the international humanitarian field. They are combat troops with hardly any humanitarian training even in their own national milieus. Combat duty and defensive troop protection as well as civilians took priority and created many problems: no food aid, no water, no protection against SGBV, no management of ethnic tensions within the sites, and lack of policy guidelines on cooperation among the INGOs. For instance; MSF have setup medical centres to treat SGBV in Upper Nile States and this initiative should have been extended to other POC sites in Equatoria States. However, it is not clear in the policies of the UN or the NGOs to what extent NGOs wish to cooperate with troops (MSF report 2017). 
___________
3. Mathiang Anyor

4. Recommendations: The Role Regional Forces can Play to Protect IDPs in United Nations Protection of Civilians (UNPOC) Sites in South Sudan as well as Refugee Camps in the neighboring countries. 
4.1 Lessons from Darfur, west Sudan
IDP camps abound in Darfur for more than 13 years. The common denominator between the IDPs of Abu-Shuko, Zam Zam, and Tuwela in the Darfur region of Sudan and the IDPs in the UNPOC sites in South Sudan is gender violence- gang rape crimes, lack of protection, and ineffective and inefficient food aid distributions (Embassy Newspaper May, 2005). The causes of gang rape between the two camps are lack of firewood or sufficient firewood substitutes or solar ovens for cooking; insufficient food aid, milk for infants and lack of water. The only difference between these two types of camps is that, the IDPs camps in Darfur are not accommodated within the peace keeping compounds in Sudan. UNAMID troops have not been overrun by IDPs.

The camps are run by United Nations Higher Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) and International Organization for Migration (IOM), while in South Sudan IDPs camps are within UN premises. Gender violence and gang rape crimes are committed by both the SPLA soldiers, illegitimate ethnic dinka paramilitary of Mathiang Anyor, and SPLA in Opposition (SPLA-IO) rebels; while in Darfur mainly by Janjaweed4 illegitimate militias of National Islamic Front, that have conducted the ethnic genocidal cleansing in Darfur, concentrating its indigenous population into camps where they are more easily controlled, gang raped, exploited and liquidated. The UNAMID has also the mandate to protect such communities, but has been ineffective and failed (UN reports).

The mandate of the UNAMID has been extended for one year more to provide protection to IDPs camps in Darfur, SGBV cases continue to increase and Darfur IDPs are now forgotten and living at the mercies of genocidaires criminals of Khartoum government.  Many of the protection measures again SGBV have been left to other agencies, e.g. World Food Program (WFP) in its food camps. It introduced SAFE measure to protect against rape of women gathering firewood for cooking or water. Solar ovens were also introduced. Manufacturing of fire material other than firewood within the camp by the IDPs themselves was also introduced and special carriers for water that reduce the time women need to fetch the water and get back to the camp in time (See WFP SAFE Materials).

In the agricultural seasons many IDPs left the camps to return to their fields for two reasons mainly – to preserve their rights over the land and to plant their own food to supplement the food aid. Without UNAMID protection, they were victims of government militia and rebel assaults.

Having worked in both Sudans for many years, and an eye witness of gang rape crimes in the Darfur region of Sudan and read the recent Amnesty International report- “Do Not Remain Silent” Survivors of Sexual Violence in South Sudan Call for Justice and Reparations on the gang rape crimes against women, girls, boys and men in Juba,Yei, Malakal, Bor and Wau, the only conclusion the readers can reach to is that, the R2P mandates of UNAMID and UNMISS of civilians protection have failed as result of insecurity, South Sudanese IDPs are fleeing their villages and cities daily at high rate of 3500 person per day (UNHCR, 2017), and large number of Darfur IDPs settled in Northern Bahar Al-Ghazal in South Sudan and were forced to take refuge either in Chad or Central Africa Republic (double migration), and the UN officials on the ground and the NY headquarter have failed to learn from measures taken earlier in Darfur and to assess why they did not result in full protection (Amnesty Report 2017).

In the Amnesty International report 2017, the victims of gender violence and gang rapes living under the ‘protection’ of the UNPOC sites described in detail their suffering in forays outside of the UNPOC sites for lack of food, water, cooking supplies, provided the reasons of venturing out of UNPOCs and how they are subjected to gang rapes. 

All the victims said that food distributed in the UNPOC sites is insufficient and they had to search for additional food and milk supplies for children and infants, lack of water and most importantly there was no firewood or charcoal to cook solid food aid such as brown and white beans, rice, red and brown split lentils, no solar ovens. As they ventured out in search for food, encountered either SPLA or rebels in bush and soldiers so brutally gang raped, and as result some became unconscious, fainted and find themselves into POC sites. The lucky ones received medical treatment and others didn’t; however, some women were raped and died or were killed by perpetrators (Ibid: p.25, 28, 29, 31 & 33). 
 
The current food aid distribution defeats the overall purpose of DAC “do no harm” and new efforts are required to ensure that more realistic approaches and workable solutions are in place in order to prevent (SGBV) crimes around UNPoCs in Sudan and South Sudan. The donors’ effort to help IDPs in the UNPOCs are commendable do save some lives; however, aid distributions require changes in new ways of thinking, new assessments that will provide positive experience rather than negative and should not cause directly and indirectly intended or unintended consequences on recipients.

4.2 Suggested Improvements

4.2.1 Increase amounts of food aid, water, cooking instruments

The overall analysis of the Amnesty report 2017 substantiated that most (SGBV) crimes against women, underage girls, boys and men around UNPOCs in South Sudan are committed by South Sudanese men in military uniforms and in rebels controlled areas. The reasons given by most women were that humanitarian food aid provided by International non-governmental Organizations (INGOs) was insufficient and require firewood or alternatives which are not provided as part of the aid package. 

The best approach to resolve firewood problems is for the INGOs to purchase durable easy-to-use solar cooker that can be delivered to the UNPOCs sites for under $20, complete with 4.25- liter cooking pot and glass lid. This type of solar cooker is almost indestructible and will make perfect ugali in an hour or two with no stirring until right at the end, and it will never burn out, but most importantly it will save women, younger girls and men lives as well as prevent them venturing out of UNPOCs.
The UNMISS can discuss with the IDPs the possibility of sending out patrols to protect those who return to their fields to plant so that they have more food.

Moreover, in an event of lack of UNMISS funds to purchase solar cookers, part of 16000 UN protection forces in South Sudan should organize convoys to escort women to market either on foot or by vehicles to buy firewood as well as other daily or weekly necessities. Another workable solution is for the UN and INGOs should delivery firewood, charcoal, propane gas and water to IDPs in POCs sites. The market convoy can be twice or three times a week based on consultation with women IDPs.

The UN and INGOs should revise the current humanitarian aid distributions system and need assessment to include increasing daily and weekly food ration, provide charcoal, firewood, propane gas, solar cookers, hygienic articles for women and girls, water, and infant milk and arrange escorts convey to drive women to market (see Enough 2015, and Amnesty International). These measures will definitely reduce and put an end to (SGBV) crimes against women as well as save lives in war zones areas and refugees camps, but overall strategy is to fulfill UNMISS mandate.

4.2.2 Night patrols

The current practice of UNMISS in South Sudan is to undertake daily patrols during the day time inside Juba. This is not the best patrol practices to deter organized criminals and this should be modified to night joint UNMISS and SPLA forces. The paper condemns any unauthorized SPLA forces from movement within Juba between 2100-0600 hours, in major cities where the IDPs are concentrated and UNMISS mandate should be extended to include areas around refugee camps where killings are happening daily. 

The reasoning behind night patrols is to prevent criminals within SPLA forces who are committing rape, killings and looting in major cities in the country and rebels from looting humanitarian aid from refugees at gun points and the sale of food aid in neighboring countries market. The protection should include South Sudanese women engaging in cross border trade and smuggling. Also, most gang rape crimes occurred at evening and night times according to the witnesses in the Amnesty Report (Amnesty 2017), so it makes perfect sense for the UN protection forces to patrol the major cities and POCs at night to deter SPLA soldiers. It ought to expand night patrols to all major cities such as Juba,Wau, and Malakal which are experiencing high rate of killing, rapes, and robbers.

While the UNMISS has not yet implemented night patrols of the peace keeping troops, there are SPLA force night patrols. The current composition of SPLA force night patrols consist of soldiers mainly from one ethnic group either Dinka and Nuer, communicate in one tribal language and this kind of composition facilitates looting, raping stealing, targeted killings and crimes cover up in Juba city much easier.

As mentioned the UN has reported that it is aiming to increase the number of patrols at night on the basis of a report (Al-Jazeera 2016/11) this year that day time patrols are insufficient. Why the UN did not from the start have night patrols is unknown. Perhaps this deficiency reflects on the knowledge gaps that arise from poor reporting. For it is common knowledge that gang rapes take place in Juba every night. No doubt in other cities as well. The UN ought to explain publicly this gap in knowledge and if known why night patrols did not take place.
As mentioned above in addition to night patrols there can be patrols accompanying those who return to plant their fields to supplement their food rations.

4.2.3 Reporting Human Rights Violations

The UN should accelerate funding for the establishment of the Hybrid Court for South Sudan and its logistics as outlined in the ARCSS of 2015 as well as to establish an independent mechanism (e.g. An Independent Commission for justice and accountability) to assist in investigating violations in the country, preserve evidences, conduct extensive video /audio interviews with survivors and witnesses to collect SGBV cases. This is the only way victims will have hope in international legal system as well as will deter government soldier and rebel criminals. The UUMISS should establish a system to protect and provide safety to witnesses. Currently, the discussion is centered on the establishing hybrid court and human rights investigative body to investigate crimes against humanity and persecute war criminals within South Sudanese forces as well as rebels groups; but, in practice there is lengthy delay in the implementations and funding.    
On another hand, ARCSS should be replacing with new agreement that has larger framework to include current opposition groups as well as new IGAD consultations initiatives.

4.2.4 More authority to UNMISS troops

Juba is not South Sudan, and South Sudan is bigger than Juba city. The overall UNMISS strategy should not focus only on better planning, preparation and establishment of a weapons-free-zones around the POC sites in Juba, but new strategy should empower peacekeeping forces with power to arrest, detain, fight back and enter into combat against law breakers; but most importantly strategy is should focus on put an end to political crisis in the country and search new strategy to achieve peace as well as establish technocrat transitional government to prepare the country for fair, free and transparence general elections in 2020.

4.2.5 Medical support

The UNMISS should establish well equipped medical centres in the UNPOCs across the country equipped with psychiatrists, psycho-social therapists and trauma counselors   to treat gender violence cases as well as to help survivors of sexual violence to restore their physical and psychological well-being.

The UNMISS should strengthen its existing partnership linkages with MSF which has expertise in medical field. They ought to coordinate operations and logistics together and benefit each other experiences. But if INGOS have policies against cooperation with military, then the UNMISS ought to rely on its own resources to fund the medical help needed physically for assaulted civilian victims of any gender and personnel for mental illnesses and support for victims who lose limbs in attacks on civilians.  

4.2.6 Expand number of POC sites and better equip

The UNMISS should establish new POC sites to accommodate newcomers and to avoid repeat of evictions of a grandma in Bentiu POC camp (MSF, ‘Grandma’).
To improve POC sites, the UNMISS should supply each IDP’s household in the POC sites with (10’x30’) Tent that has with 6 removable windows side wall. Tent can protect IDPs from sickness that are resulted directly to the overcrowded and deplorable conditions as well as provide IDPs with tempera shelters.  Tent and access to adequate water, and sanitation can improve the basic conditions and positive environment in the POC sites.

4.2.7 In-Sites Conflicts

The UNMISS should support the work of traditional authorities (Chiefs) in some POCs sites with operation and logistics, but should not rely on them 100% as some cases might require police investigation (LSE). Where police investigation is needed IDPs ought to be consulted on how much they trust the national South Sudan police and require strict observation of police interactions with IDPS by the UN Police Observers, who are often excluded from national police interrogations.

4.2.8 Livelihoods training

In the Darfur IDP camps, the specialized UN agencies and NGOs/INGOs introduced livelihoods trainings, e.g. food for education. Taking a lesson from this, the UNMISS mandate should establish literacy classes, small skill trader training, and small business enterprise training in the POC sites to equip IDPs with some knowledge for future use in lieu of organizing cricket and tawkenodo sports. 

4.2.9. The UNMISS should be mindful of Charcoal Trade Leading which can lead to Deforestation in South Sudan

Conclusions

The UNMISS DPKO needs to take a hard look at its POCs mandate in terms of its implementation. It can ask for more women peace keepers, ask for more troops trained in humanitarian crises, turn over the management of POC to specialized agencies and concentrate on its military/policing powers, or use the help of UNHCR/IOM to transfer as many civilians as possible to proper refugee and IDP camps. Long-term POC confuses the situation by duplicating the mandates of specialized agencies. A POC sites can only be temporary situation with a clear plan of transfer. The peace keeping mandate becomes otherwise too diluted and peace keeping funds are diverted.

About the author:
©Hüstin Läkü, Sr., is a native South Sudanese, and educated in South Sudan, Sudan, Egypt, Germany and Switzerland. He is a graduate of University of Fribourg in Switzerland; Caux Scholars Program in Switzerland, and University of Ottawa in Canada.

His current research topic Title: Evaluating South Sudan Governance: From Perspective of Federated Forms and/or Devolution; Politics of Foreign Aid in Africa-The Myth of Foreign Aid in Africa: Case Sudan and South Sudan and the Role of Agricultural in South Sudan’s Economic Development.

Läkü,Sr, helped create Sudan Health Care and Education Project (SHCEP) to improve public health care and Education in South Sudan through knowledge transfer, professional development and capacity building. Through SHCEP, Hüstin working with university-based Canadian physicians and 190 medical professionals in the County of Cornell in the U.S.A., he brought about the donation of ten railroad carloads of medical training equipment, wheelchairs, medical textbooks, nursing and health sciences, physic, Chemistry, Biology and English textbooks worth about one million dollars and equipped 13 medical clinics around Central Equatoria State.

Currently, he is working on new projects, building partnerships between Carleton and Ottawa universities, and Juba University; building a school for girls in Eastern Equatorial State; and Seed for Democracy for South Sudan (SfDSS).

The mission of SfDSS is to prepare South Sudan, to understand and adopt the democratic processes and practices that would help it ensure future peaceful transference of power from successive governments.

Hüstin Läkü, Sr., is a recipient of Dr. Martin Luther, Jr, Dream Keepers Award, and Queen Elizabeth II model for Humanitarianism.

Endnotes:
1.    The Human Rights Commission was established under the auspices of the United Nations with mandate to monitor, investigate, verify and report on abuses, violations of human rights, violations of International humanitarian law and the most serious crimes in South Sudan since December 2013 by inter alia collecting and preserving evidences of human rights violations and abuses and violation of international Humanitarian Law and by supporting criminal proceedings before the hybrid court and national, regional and international tribunals with jurisdiction over such crimes (OHCHR 2017).

2.    Japanese Engineers Members of UNMISS Support First National Karate Competition in South Sudan.

3.    Mathiang Anyor are is located at the Luri training centre west of Juba city. Luri is a Bari community land grabbed by Kiir in order to establish his cattle ranch. These illegitimate para military groups were funded by the national budget. The recruitment and composition of tribal groups are mainly from Awiel and Warrap States PM and Kiir’s home states. They operate independent of SPLA with strict tribal mandate to shot and kill rape, loot and grabbed non dinka lands and properties. The groups lack military training as well as rules and regulations and it replaces the existence security sectors.

4.    Janjaweed are paramilitary trained, armed and paid by Khartoum regime and responsible for killing, raping, torturing, insecurity, human rights violations, crimes against humanity and Darfur genocide.

References

Amnesty Internaitonal, “DO NOT REMAIN SILENT” SURVIVORS OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE IN SOUTH SUDAN CALL FOR JUSTICE AND REPARATIONS,

Enough, Food Culture and Conflict in South Sudan,  -

Eyewitness Account. Embassy [Canada] Newspaper. Retrieved on September 1st, 2017, from:
http://www.embassynews.ca/author/Justin_Laku, Last read on September 1st, 2017
LSE, Traditional authorities work in POCs sites in South Sudan. Retrieved from:  

blogs.lse.ac.uk/jsrp/2016/09/29/chiefs-courts-protecting-civilians-in-south-sudan/September, Last read on September 13th, 2017

Medicins sans Frontieres (MSF), Providing medical treatment to IDPs and Refugees. Retrieved from:

http://www.msf.ca/en/article/uganda-providing-sexual-violence-care-to-south-sudanese-refugees, last read September 13th, 20173

MSF, Grandma evicted from POC in Bentiu, 
South Sudan agrees to deploy regional protection force. Retrieved on December 2017,
The Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan through resolution 31/20 of 23 March 2016. Retrieved on September 2017, from:          http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/HRC/CoHSouthSudan/Pages/Index.aspx
The Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness.

UNMISS, JAPANESE ENGINEERS SUPPORT FIRST NATIONAL KARATE COMPETITION IN

SOUTH SUDAN. https://unmiss.unmissions.org/unmiss-japanese-engineers-support-first-national-karate-competition-south-sudan, last Read september 1st, 2017

UNMISS Mandate. Retrieved on September 1st, 2017, from

Weiss, T. (2004),  Military-Civilian Interactions: Humanitarian Crisis and the
Responsibility to Protect. Oxford: Roman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc.



[1] Japanese Engineers Members of UNMISS Support First National Karate Competition in South Sudan.

 



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