South Sudan teetering on edge of renewed civil war, warns UN envoy
The latest tensions stem from fighting in the country’s north between government troops and a rebel militia, known as the White Army.

South Sudan is teetering on the edge of renewed civil war, the top United Nations official in the world’s youngest nation warned on Monday.
Calling the situation unfolding in the country “dire”, Nicholas Haysom said international efforts to broker a peaceful solution can only succeed if president Salva Kiir and his rival-turned-vice president, Riek Machar, are willing to engage “and put the interests of their people ahead of their own”.
There were high hopes when oil-rich South Sudan gained independence from Sudan in 2011 after a long conflict.
But the country slid into a civil war in December 2013 largely based on ethnic divisions when forces loyal to Mr Kiir, an ethnic Dinka, battled those loyal to Mr Machar, an ethnic Nuer.
More than 400,000 people were killed in the war, which ended with a 2018 peace agreement that brought Mr Kiir and Mr Machar together in a government of national unity.

Under the agreement, elections were supposed to be held in February 2023, but they were postponed until December 2024 — and again until 2026.
The latest tensions stem from fighting in the country’s north between government troops and a rebel militia, known as the White Army, which is widely believed to be allied with Mr Machar.
Earlier this month, a South Sudanese general was among several people killed when a United Nations helicopter on a mission to evacuate government troops from the town of Nasir, the scene of the fighting in Upper Nile state, came under fire.
Days earlier on March 4, the White Army overran the military garrison in Nasir and government troops responded by surrounding Mr Machar’s home in the capital Juba and arresting several of his key allies.
Mr Haysom said tensions and violence were escalating “particularly as we grow closer to elections and as political competition increases, sharpens between the principal players”.
He said Mr Kiir and Mr Machar do not trust each other enough to display the leadership needed to implement the 2018 peace deal and move toward a future with a stable and democratic South Sudan.
“Rampant misinformation, disinformation and hate speech is also ratcheting up tensions and driving ethnic divisions, and fear,” Mr Haysom said.
“Given this grim situation,” he said, “we are left with no other conclusion but to assess that South Sudan is teetering on the edge of a relapse into civil war”.
Mr Haysom, who heads the nearly 18,000-member UN peacekeeping mission in South Sudan, warned that a relapse into open war would lead to the same horrors that ravaged the country, especially in 2013 and 2016.
He said the UN takes the threat of the “ethnic transformation” of the conflict very seriously.
To try to prevent a new civil war, the UN special envoy said the peacekeeping mission is engaging in intense shuttle diplomacy with international and regional partners, including the African Union.
He said the collective message of the regional and international community is for Mr Kiir and Mr Machar to meet to resolve their differences, return to the 2018 peace deal, adhere to the ceasefire, release detained officials and resolve tensions “through dialogue rather than military confrontation”.