South Sudan’s rebels say
they have retaken control of their stronghold town of Pagak near the
border with Ethiopia from government forces.
"We took control of Pagak ... government forces are not in Pagak, we
have pushed them out," Reuters quoted rebel spokesman Lam Paul Gabriel
as saying on Saturday.
Pagak was captured by South Sudan's military on Monday, but rebels
engaged in heavy clashes with government forces on Friday in an attempt
to retake the town.
The rebels’ control of Pagak, located in the Upper Nile
region, provides them with an easy route for cross-border movement and
smuggling of arms and other supplies from Ethiopia.
Dickson Gatluak Jock, a spokesman for South Sudan's Vice President
Taban Deng Gai, rejected that the rebels had retaken the control of the
town but said three army soldiers were killed and four others wounded
during the clashes.
"We clashed with them (rebels) yesterday in Pagak, but we are in full control of the area," he said.
Jock noted that fighting had died down on Saturday, but said the rebels "are not very far from our area."
He said the army killed five rebels during the Friday clashes. The rebels denied it. South Sudanese refugee children attend are seen in a tent in Bidi Bidi refugee camp in northern Uganda. (Photo by AP)
The South Sudanese vice president used to be a rebel himself, but he
was appointed to his current position after he defected to the
government in 2016.
Gai’s former rebel forces are now part of the government military and
they are fighting on the front line against forces loyal to opposition
leader Riek Machar in Pagak.
Pagak has been a key element in Machar’s insurgency since he defected
as the main deputy to President Salva Kiir in December 2013 over
allegations of plotting a coup.
Weeks of clashes have forced thousands to flee the Upper Nile region.
Tens of thousands have been killed and millions displaced in the
conflict. Machar was forced into exile in South Africa but forces loyal
to him still operate in Pagak and other regions of the world’s youngest
country.
The war spread across South Sudan with the collapse of a peace agreement in 2015, leaving many in poverty and despair.
The United Nations says nearly six million people, around half of
South Sudan’s population, are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance.
Comments
Post a Comment