The United States Tuesday condemned South Sudan’s expulsion of
an outspoken UN aid coordinator as an “affront to the international
community” and called for the strife-torn country to reverse its
decision.
The UN announced Monday that South Sudan officials
had decided to expel aid coordinator Toby Lanzer just weeks before he
was to leave for a new assignment.
South Sudan’s government justified the move by stating that Lanzer had
crossed a line when he made a comment predicting that the country would
collapse.
US State Department spokesman John Kirby said that the expulsion
“demonstrates a callous disregard for the suffering of the South
Sudanese people.”
“The expulsion of Mr Lanzer is an affront to the international
community working to bring peace and stability to South Sudan,” he said
in a statement.
The world’s newest state was plunged into conflict nearly 18 months
ago between forces loyal to President Salva Kiir and rebels allied with
his former deputy, Riek Machar.The government’s priority should be bringing an end to the violence
that has already displaced more than two million of its citizens,” Kirby
said, adding that half a million of those people were now refugees in
neighboring countries.
Some 4.6 million people faced “extreme, life-threatening hunger” as a result of the situation, Kirby said.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has condemned the move and called on
Juba to immediately reverse the decision targeting Lanzer, a British
national who also served as UN deputy envoy to South Sudan.
“We join UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and other governments in
calling on the government of South Sudan to reverse its decision and to
cooperate fully with all United Nations entities present in South
Sudan,” Kirby added.
South Sudan is among the UN’s worst humanitarian crises and Lanzer
has put the blame for the worsening violence squarely on the shoulders
of the leaders who have signed several peace accords and failed to
implement them.
Lanzer is due to take up a new post as UN regional humanitarian coordinator for the Sahel at the end of June.
source: capital fm kenya