Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Saturday, July 9, 2016

South Sudan clashes 'leave dozens dead' in Juba


  • 2 hours ago
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  • From the sectionAfrica
Mr Machar (l) and Mr KiirImage copyrightAFP
Image captionGunfire erupted shortly after Mr Machar (L) and Mr Kiir met on Friday

by Rashida Adjani and Biodun Iginla, BBC News, N'Djamena
Dozens of people have been killed in clashes in South Sudan's capital Juba, military, medical and journalistic sources have said.
Gunfire broke out on Friday evening near the state house where President Salva Kiir was meeting his sometime rival, Vice-President Riek Machar.
Estimates of the death toll vary, but most accounts put the number over 100 - some as high as 150.
A 2015 peace deal to end a 20-month civil war has failed to quell unrest.
Juba is in lockdown as South Sudan, the world's newest country, marks the fifth anniversary of independence from neighbouring Sudan.
Friday's fighting was apparently sparked by a shootout between Mr Kiir's and Mr Machar's bodyguards . The two men met at the presidential palace on Friday.
The half-hour gun battle then escalated, with heavy weapons and artillery being used in several parts of the city.
In a speech marking independence, Mr Kiir said: "Making South Sudan glorious will only happen if we see ourselves as South Sudanese first rather than tribal or political groupings," Juba's Miraya FM station reported.
He added that everyone in South Sudan should "use our rich cultural diversity as the source of our unity".
Media captionFive years of South Sudan
On Saturday, a South Sudanese journalist told the BBC that other journalists stuck inside the state house counted at least 100 bodies, inside and outside the compound.
A hospital doctor told the Associated Press that scores of bodies had been brought in, while a military spokesman for the opposition - Mr Machar's faction - told Reuters 115 people had been killed.
Mr Kiir and Mr Machar described Friday's violence as "unfortunate".
Under a peace deal agreed last August, the two armed factions took up positions in Juba in April.
Tens of thousands died in the civil war and millions were forced from their homes.
South Sudan, the world's youngest nation, is so short of money that the authorities say no official anniversary celebrations will be held.
The streets of Juba were reported to be quiet on Saturday.
Roadblocks have been set up in the capital, with troops searching people for weapons.
South Sudan map

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